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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Russia, by Donald Mackenzie Wallace</title>
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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold;'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Russia, by Donald Mackenzie Wallace</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
+at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Russia</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Donald Mackenzie Wallace</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June, 1998 [eBook #1349]<br />
+[Most recently updated: April 12, 2021]</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Donald Lainson and David Widger</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RUSSIA ***</div>
+
+ <h1>
+ RUSSIA
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ by Donald Mackenzie Wallace
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Copyright 1905
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XXVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER XXVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER XXIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0030"> CHAPTER XXX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0031"> CHAPTER XXXI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0032"> CHAPTER XXXII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0033"> CHAPTER XXXIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0034"> CHAPTER XXXIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0035"> CHAPTER XXXV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0036"> CHAPTER XXXVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0037"> CHAPTER XXXVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0038"> CHAPTER XXXVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0039"> CHAPTER XXXIX </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ Preface <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER I <br /> TRAVELLING IN RUSSIA <br /> Railways&mdash;State
+ Interference&mdash;River Communications&mdash;Russian "Grand <br /> Tour"&mdash;The
+ Volga&mdash;Kazan&mdash;Zhigulinskiya Gori&mdash;Finns and Tartars&mdash;The
+ <br /> Don&mdash;Difficulties of Navigation&mdash;Discomforts&mdash;Rats&mdash;Hotels
+ and <br /> Their Peculiar Customs&mdash;Roads&mdash;Hibernian Phraseology
+ <br /> Explained&mdash;Bridges&mdash;Posting&mdash;A Tarantass&mdash;Requisites
+ for <br /> Travelling&mdash;Travelling in Winter&mdash;Frostbitten&mdash;Disagreeable
+ <br /> Episodes&mdash;Scene at a Post-Station. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER II <br /> IN THE NORTHERN FORESTS <br /> Bird's-eye View of Russia&mdash;The
+ Northern Forests&mdash;Purpose of <br /> my Journey&mdash;Negotiations&mdash;The
+ Road&mdash;A Village&mdash;A Peasant's <br /> House&mdash;Vapour-Baths&mdash;Curious
+ Custom&mdash;Arrival. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER III <br /> VOLUNTARY EXILE <br /> Ivanofka&mdash;History of the
+ Place&mdash;The Steward of the Estate&mdash;Slav and <br /> Teutonic
+ Natures&mdash;A German's View of the Emancipation&mdash;Justices of the
+ <br /> Peace&mdash;New School of Morals&mdash;The Russian Language&mdash;Linguistic
+ Talent of <br /> the Russians&mdash;My Teacher&mdash;A Big Dose of
+ Current History. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER IV <br /> THE VILLAGE PRIEST <br /> Priests' Names&mdash;Clerical
+ Marriages&mdash;The White and the Black Clergy&mdash;Why <br /> the
+ People do not Respect the Parish Priests&mdash;History of the White
+ <br /> Clergy&mdash;The Parish Priest and the Protestant Pastor&mdash;In
+ What Sense <br /> the Russian People are Religious&mdash;Icons&mdash;The
+ Clergy and Popular <br /> Education&mdash;Ecclesiastical Reform&mdash;Premonitory
+ Symptoms of Change&mdash;Two <br /> Typical Specimens of the Parochial
+ Clergy of the Present Day. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER V <br /> A MEDICAL CONSULTATION <br /> Unexpected Illness&mdash;A
+ Village Doctor&mdash;Siberian Plague&mdash;My <br /> Studies&mdash;Russian
+ Historians&mdash;A Russian Imitator of Dickens&mdash;A ci-devant <br />
+ Domestic Serf&mdash;Medicine and Witchcraft&mdash;A Remnant of Paganism&mdash;Credulity
+ <br /> of the Peasantry&mdash;Absurd Rumours&mdash;A Mysterious Visit
+ from St. <br /> Barbara&mdash;Cholera on Board a Steamer&mdash;Hospitals&mdash;Lunatic
+ Asylums&mdash;Amongst <br /> Maniacs. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER VI <br /> A PEASANT FAMILY OF THE OLD TYPE <br /> Ivan Petroff&mdash;His
+ Past Life&mdash;Co-operative Associations&mdash;Constitution of <br /> a
+ Peasant's Household&mdash;Predominance of Economic Conceptions over
+ those <br /> of Blood-relationship&mdash;Peasant Marriages&mdash;Advantages
+ of Living in Large <br /> Families&mdash;Its Defects&mdash;Family
+ Disruptions and their Consequences. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER VII <br /> THE PEASANTRY OF THE NORTH <br /> Communal Land&mdash;System
+ of Agriculture&mdash;Parish Fetes&mdash;Fasting&mdash;Winter <br />
+ Occupations&mdash;Yearly Migrations&mdash;Domestic Industries&mdash;Influence
+ <br /> of Capital and Wholesale Enterprise&mdash;The State <br /> Peasants&mdash;Serf-dues&mdash;Buckle's
+ "History of Civilisation"&mdash;A precocious <br /> Yamstchik&mdash;"People
+ Who Play Pranks"&mdash;A Midnight Alarm&mdash;The Far North. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER VIII <br /> THE MIR, OR VILLAGE COMMUNITY <br /> Social and
+ Political Importance of the Mir&mdash;The Mir and the Family <br />
+ Compared&mdash;Theory of the Communal System&mdash;Practical Deviations
+ from the <br /> Theory&mdash;The Mir a Good Specimen of Constitutional
+ Government of the <br /> Extreme Democratic Type&mdash;The Village
+ Assembly&mdash;Female Members&mdash;The <br /> Elections&mdash;Distribution
+ of the Communal Land. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER IX <br /> HOW THE COMMUNE HAS BEEN PRESERVED, AND WHAT IT IS TO
+ EFFECT IN THE <br /> FUTURE <br /> Sweeping Reforms after the Crimean War&mdash;Protest
+ Against the Laissez <br /> Faire Principle&mdash;Fear of the Proletariat&mdash;English
+ and Russian Methods of <br /> Legislation Contrasted&mdash;Sanguine
+ Expectations&mdash;Evil Consequences of <br /> the Communal System&mdash;The
+ Commune of the Future&mdash;Proletariat of the <br /> Towns&mdash;The
+ Present State of Things Merely Temporary. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER X <br /> FINNISH AND TARTAR VILLAGES <br /> A Finnish Tribe&mdash;Finnish
+ Villages&mdash;Various Stages of <br /> Russification&mdash;Finnish Women&mdash;Finnish
+ Religions&mdash;Method of "Laying" <br /> Ghosts&mdash;Curious Mixture of
+ Christianity and Paganism&mdash;Conversion of <br /> the Finns&mdash;A
+ Tartar Village&mdash;A Russian Peasant's Conception of <br />
+ Mahometanism&mdash;A Mahometan's View of Christianity&mdash;Propaganda&mdash;The
+ <br /> Russian Colonist&mdash;Migrations of Peoples During the Dark Ages.
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XI <br /> LORD NOVGOROD THE GREAT <br /> Departure from Ivanofka
+ and Arrival at Novgorod&mdash;The Eastern Half of <br /> the Town&mdash;The
+ Kremlin&mdash;An Old Legend&mdash;The Armed Men of Rus&mdash;The <br />
+ Northmen&mdash;Popular Liberty in Novgorod&mdash;The Prince and the
+ Popular <br /> Assembly&mdash;Civil Dissensions and Faction-fights&mdash;The
+ Commercial Republic <br /> Conquered by the Muscovite Tsars&mdash;Ivan
+ the Terrible&mdash;Present Condition <br /> of the Town&mdash;Provincial
+ Society&mdash;Card-playing&mdash;Periodicals&mdash;"Eternal <br />
+ Stillness." <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XII <br /> THE TOWNS AND THE MERCANTILE CLASSES <br /> General
+ Character of Russian Towns&mdash;Scarcity of Towns in Russia&mdash;Why
+ <br /> the Urban Element in the Population is so Small&mdash;History of
+ <br /> Russian Municipal Institutions&mdash;Unsuccessful Efforts to
+ Create a <br /> Tiers-etat&mdash;Merchants, Burghers, and Artisans&mdash;Town
+ Council&mdash;A Rich <br /> Merchant&mdash;His House&mdash;His Love of
+ Ostentation&mdash;His Conception of <br /> Aristocracy&mdash;Official
+ Decorations&mdash;Ignorance and Dishonesty of the <br /> Commercial
+ Classes&mdash;Symptoms of Change. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XIII <br /> THE PASTORAL TRIBES OF THE STEPPE <br /> A Journey to
+ the Steppe Region of the Southeast&mdash;The Volga&mdash;Town <br /> and
+ Province of Samara&mdash;Farther Eastward&mdash;Appearance of the <br />
+ Villages&mdash;Characteristic Incident&mdash;Peasant Mendacity&mdash;Explanation
+ of the <br /> Phenomenon&mdash;I Awake in Asia&mdash;A Bashkir Aoul&mdash;Diner
+ la Tartare&mdash;Kumyss&mdash;A <br /> Bashkir Troubadour&mdash;Honest
+ Mehemet Zian&mdash;Actual Economic Condition of <br /> the Bashkirs
+ Throws Light on a Well-known Philosophical Theory&mdash;Why <br /> a
+ Pastoral Race Adopts Agriculture&mdash;The Genuine Steppe&mdash;The
+ <br /> Kirghiz&mdash;Letter from Genghis Khan&mdash;The Kalmyks&mdash;Nogai
+ Tartars&mdash;Struggle <br /> between Nomadic Hordes and Agricultural
+ Colonists. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XIV <br /> THE MONGOL DOMINATION <br /> The Conquest&mdash;Genghis
+ Khan and his People&mdash;Creation and Rapid <br /> Disintegration of the
+ Mongol Empire&mdash;The Golden Horde&mdash;The Real <br /> Character of
+ the Mongol Domination&mdash;Religious Toleration&mdash;Mongol System
+ <br /> of Government&mdash;Grand Princes&mdash;The Princes of Moscow&mdash;Influence
+ of the <br /> Mongol Domination&mdash;Practical Importance of the
+ Subject. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XV <br /> THE COSSACKS <br /> Lawlessness on the Steppe&mdash;Slave-markets
+ of the Crimea&mdash;The Military <br /> Cordon and the Free Cossacks&mdash;The
+ Zaporovian Commonwealth Compared with <br /> Sparta and with the
+ Mediaeval Military Orders&mdash;The Cossacks of the Don, <br /> of the
+ Volga, and of the Ural&mdash;Border Warfare&mdash;The Modern Cossacks&mdash;Land
+ <br /> Tenure among the Cossacks of the Don&mdash;The Transition from
+ Pastoral to <br /> Agriculture Life&mdash;"Universal Law" of Social
+ Development&mdash;Communal versus <br /> Private Property&mdash;Flogging
+ as a Means of Land-registration. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XVI <br /> FOREIGN COLONISTS ON THE STEPPE <br /> The Steppe&mdash;Variety
+ of Races, Languages, and Religions&mdash;The German <br /> Colonists&mdash;In
+ What Sense the Russians are an Imitative <br /> People&mdash;The
+ Mennonites&mdash;Climate and Arboriculture&mdash;Bulgarian <br />
+ Colonists&mdash;Tartar-Speaking Greeks&mdash;Jewish <br /> Agriculturists&mdash;Russification&mdash;A
+ Circassian Scotchman&mdash;Numerical <br /> Strength of the Foreign
+ Element. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XVII <br /> AMONG THE HERETICS <br /> The Molokanye&mdash;My
+ Method of Investigation&mdash;Alexandrof-Hai&mdash;An Unexpected <br />
+ Theological Discussion&mdash;Doctrines and Ecclesiastical Organisation
+ of <br /> the Molokanye&mdash;Moral Supervision and Mutual Assistance&mdash;History
+ of the <br /> Sect&mdash;A False Prophet&mdash;Utilitarian Christianity&mdash;Classification
+ of <br /> the Fantastic Sects&mdash;The "Khlysti"&mdash;Policy of the
+ Government towards <br /> Sectarianism&mdash;Two Kinds of Heresy&mdash;Probable
+ Future of the Heretical <br /> Sects&mdash;Political Disaffection. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XVIII <br /> THE DISSENTERS <br /> Dissenters not to be Confounded
+ with Heretics&mdash;Extreme Importance <br /> Attached to Ritual
+ Observances&mdash;The Raskol, or Great Schism in the <br /> Seventeenth
+ Century&mdash;Antichrist Appears!&mdash;Policy of Peter the Great <br />
+ and Catherine II.&mdash;Present Ingenious Method of Securing Religious
+ <br /> Toleration&mdash;Internal Development of the Raskol&mdash;Schism
+ among the <br /> Schismatics&mdash;The Old Ritualists&mdash;The
+ Priestless People&mdash;Cooling of the <br /> Fanatical Enthusiasm and
+ Formation of New Sects&mdash;Recent Policy of <br /> the Government
+ towards the Sectarians&mdash;Numerical Force and Political <br />
+ Significance of Sectarianism. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XIX <br /> CHURCH AND STATE <br /> The Russian Orthodox Church&mdash;Russia
+ Outside of the Mediaeval Papal <br /> Commonwealth&mdash;Influence of the
+ Greek Church&mdash;Ecclesiastical History of <br /> Russia&mdash;Relations
+ between Church and State&mdash;Eastern Orthodoxy and the <br /> Russian
+ National Church&mdash;The Synod&mdash;Ecclesiastical Grumbling&mdash;Local
+ <br /> Ecclesiastical Administration&mdash;The Black Clergy and the
+ Monasteries&mdash;The <br /> Character of the Eastern Church Reflected in
+ the History of Religious <br /> Art&mdash;Practical Consequences&mdash;The
+ Union Scheme. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XX <br /> THE NOBLESSE <br /> The Nobles In Early Times&mdash;The
+ Mongol Domination&mdash;The Tsardom of <br /> Muscovy&mdash;Family
+ Dignity&mdash;Reforms of Peter the Great&mdash;The Nobles Adopt <br />
+ West-European Conceptions&mdash;Abolition of Obligatory Service&mdash;Influence
+ of <br /> Catherine II.&mdash;The Russian Dvoryanstvo Compared with the
+ French Noblesse <br /> and the English Aristocracy&mdash;Russian Titles&mdash;Probable
+ Future of the <br /> Russian Noblesse. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXI <br /> LANDED PROPRIETORS OF THE OLD SCHOOL <br /> Russian
+ Hospitality&mdash;A Country-House&mdash;Its Owner Described&mdash;His
+ Life, <br /> Past and Present&mdash;Winter Evenings&mdash;Books&mdash;-Connection
+ with the Outer <br /> World&mdash;The Crimean War and the Emancipation&mdash;A
+ Drunken, Dissolute <br /> Proprietor&mdash;An Old General and his Wife&mdash;"Name
+ Days"&mdash;A Legendary <br /> Monster&mdash;A Retired Judge&mdash;A
+ Clever Scribe&mdash;Social Leniency&mdash;Cause of <br /> Demoralisation.
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXII <br /> PROPRIETORS OF THE MODERN SCHOOL <br /> A Russian
+ Petit Maitre&mdash;His House and Surroundings&mdash;Abortive Attempts
+ <br /> to Improve Agriculture and the Condition of the Serfs&mdash;A
+ Comparison&mdash;A <br /> "Liberal" Tchinovnik&mdash;His Idea of Progress&mdash;A
+ Justice of the Peace&mdash;His <br /> Opinion of Russian Literature,
+ Tchinovniks, and Petits Maitres&mdash;His <br /> Supposed and Real
+ Character&mdash;An Extreme Radical&mdash;Disorders in <br /> the
+ Universities&mdash;Administrative Procedure&mdash;Russia's Capacity for
+ <br /> Accomplishing Political and Social Evolutions&mdash;A Court
+ Dignitary in his <br /> Country House. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXIII <br /> SOCIAL CLASSES <br /> Do Social Classes or Castes
+ Exist in Russia?&mdash;Well-marked Social <br /> Types&mdash;Classes
+ Recognised by the Legislation and the Official <br /> Statistics&mdash;Origin
+ and Gradual Formation of these Classes&mdash;Peculiarity <br /> in the
+ Historical Development of Russia&mdash;Political Life and Political
+ <br /> Parties. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXIV <br /> THE IMPERIAL ADMINISTRATION AND THE OFFICIALS <br />
+ The Officials in Norgorod Assist Me in My Studies&mdash;The Modern
+ Imperial <br /> Administration Created by Peter the Great, and Developed
+ by his <br /> Successors&mdash;A Slavophil's View of the Administration&mdash;The
+ Administration <br /> Briefly Described&mdash;The Tchinovniks, or
+ Officials&mdash;Official Titles, and <br /> Their Real Significance&mdash;What
+ the Administration Has Done for Russia in <br /> the Past&mdash;Its
+ Character Determined by the Peculiar Relation between <br /> the
+ Government and the People&mdash;Its Radical Vices&mdash;Bureaucratic
+ <br /> Remedies&mdash;Complicated Formal Procedure&mdash;The Gendarmerie:
+ My Personal <br /> Relations with this Branch of the Administration;
+ Arrest and Release&mdash;A <br /> Strong, Healthy Public Opinion the Only
+ Effectual Remedy for Bad <br /> Administration. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXV <br /> MOSCOW AND THE SLAVOPHILS <br /> Two Ancient Cities&mdash;Kief
+ Not a Good Point for Studying Old Russian <br /> National Life&mdash;Great
+ Russians and Little Russians&mdash;Moscow&mdash;Easter Eve <br /> in the
+ Kremlin&mdash;Curious Custom&mdash;Anecdote of the Emperor <br />
+ Nicholas&mdash;Domiciliary Visits of the Iberian Madonna&mdash;The
+ Streets of <br /> Moscow&mdash;Recent Changes in the Character of the
+ City&mdash;Vulgar Conception <br /> of the Slavophils&mdash;Opinion
+ Founded on Personal Acquaintance&mdash;Slavophil <br /> Sentiment a
+ Century Ago&mdash;Origin and Development of the Slavophil <br /> Doctrine&mdash;Slavophilism
+ Essentially Muscovite&mdash;The Panslavist <br /> Element&mdash;The
+ Slavophils and the Emancipation. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXVI <br /> ST. PETERSBURG AND EUROPEAN INFLUENCE <br /> St.
+ Petersburg and Berlin&mdash;Big Houses&mdash;The "Lions"&mdash;Peter the
+ Great&mdash;His <br /> Aims and Policy&mdash;The German Regime&mdash;Nationalist
+ Reaction&mdash;French <br /> Influence&mdash;Consequent Intellectual
+ Sterility&mdash;Influence of the <br /> Sentimental School&mdash;Hostility
+ to Foreign Influences&mdash;A New Period of <br /> Literary Importation&mdash;Secret
+ Societies&mdash;The Catastrophe&mdash;The Age of <br /> Nicholas&mdash;A
+ Terrible War on Parnassus&mdash;Decline of Romanticism and <br />
+ Transcendentalism&mdash;Gogol&mdash;The Revolutionary Agitation of 1848&mdash;New
+ <br /> Reaction&mdash;Conclusion. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XXVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXVII <br /> THE CRIMEAN WAR AND ITS CONSEQUENCES <br /> The
+ Emperor Nicholas and his System&mdash;The Men with Aspirations and the
+ <br /> Apathetically Contented&mdash;National Humiliation&mdash;Popular
+ Discontent <br /> and the Manuscript Literature&mdash;Death of Nicholas&mdash;Alexander
+ II.&mdash;New <br /> Spirit&mdash;Reform Enthusiasm&mdash;Change in the
+ Periodical Literature&mdash;The <br /> Kolokol&mdash;The Conservatives&mdash;The
+ Tchinovniks&mdash;First Specific <br /> Proposals&mdash;Joint-Stock
+ Companies&mdash;The Serf Question Comes to the Front. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER XXVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXVIII <br /> THE SERFS <br /> The Rural Population in Ancient
+ Times&mdash;The Peasantry in the Eighteenth <br /> Century&mdash;How Was
+ This Change Effected?&mdash;The Common Explanation <br /> Inaccurate&mdash;Serfage
+ the Result of Permanent Economic and Political <br /> Causes&mdash;Origin
+ of the Adscriptio Glebae&mdash;Its Consequences&mdash;Serf <br />
+ Insurrection&mdash;Turning-point in the History of Serfage&mdash;Serfage
+ in <br /> Russia and in Western Europe&mdash;State Peasants&mdash;Numbers
+ and Geographical <br /> Distribution of the Serf Population&mdash;Serf
+ Dues&mdash;Legal and Actual Power <br /> of the Proprietors&mdash;The
+ Serfs' Means of Defence&mdash;Fugitives&mdash;Domestic <br /> Serfs&mdash;Strange
+ Advertisements in the Moscow Gazette&mdash;Moral Influence of <br />
+ Serfage. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER XXIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXIX <br /> THE EMANCIPATION OF THE SERFS <br /> The Question
+ Raised&mdash;Chief Committee&mdash;The Nobles of the Lithuanian <br />
+ Provinces&mdash;The Tsar's Broad Hint to the Noblesse&mdash;Enthusiasm
+ in the <br /> Press&mdash;The Proprietors&mdash;Political Aspirations&mdash;No
+ Opposition&mdash;The <br /> Government&mdash;Public Opinion&mdash;Fear of
+ the Proletariat&mdash;The Provincial <br /> Committees&mdash;The
+ Elaboration Commission&mdash;The Question Ripens&mdash;Provincial <br />
+ Deputies&mdash;Discontent and Demonstrations&mdash;The Manifesto&mdash;Fundamental
+ <br /> Principles of the Law&mdash;Illusions and Disappointment of the
+ <br /> Serfs&mdash;Arbiters of the Peace&mdash;A Characteristic Incident&mdash;Redemption&mdash;Who
+ <br /> Effected the Emancipation? <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0030"> CHAPTER XXX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXX <br /> THE LANDED PROPRIETORS SINCE THE EMANCIPATION <br />
+ Two Opposite Opinions&mdash;Difficulties of Investigation&mdash;The
+ Problem <br /> Simplified&mdash;Direct and Indirect Compensation&mdash;The
+ Direct Compensation <br /> Inadequate&mdash;What the Proprietors Have
+ Done with the Remainder of <br /> Their Estates&mdash;Immediate Moral
+ Effect of the Abolition of Serfage&mdash;The <br /> Economic Problem&mdash;The
+ Ideal Solution and the Difficulty of Realising <br /> It&mdash;More
+ Primitive Arrangements&mdash;The Northern Agricultural Zone&mdash;The
+ <br /> Black-earth Zone&mdash;The Labour Difficulty&mdash;The
+ Impoverishment of <br /> the Noblesse Not a New Phenomenon&mdash;Mortgaging
+ of Estates&mdash;Gradual <br /> Expropriation of the Noblesse-Rapid
+ Increase in the Production and <br /> Export of Grain&mdash;How Far this
+ Has Benefited the Landed Proprietors. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0031"> CHAPTER XXXI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXXI <br /> THE EMANCIPATED PEASANTRY <br /> The Effects of
+ Liberty&mdash;Difficulty of Obtaining Accurate <br /> Information&mdash;Pessimist
+ Testimony of the Proprietors&mdash;Vague Replies of <br /> the Peasants&mdash;My
+ Conclusions in 1877&mdash;Necessity of Revising Them&mdash;My <br />
+ Investigations Renewed in 1903&mdash;Recent Researches by Native
+ Political <br /> Economists&mdash;Peasant Impoverishment Universally
+ Recognised&mdash;Various <br /> Explanations Suggested&mdash;Demoralisation
+ of the Common People&mdash;Peasant <br /> Self-government&mdash;Communal
+ System of Land Tenure&mdash;Heavy <br /> Taxation&mdash;Disruption of
+ Peasant Families&mdash;Natural Increase of <br /> Population&mdash;Remedies
+ Proposed&mdash;Migration&mdash;Reclamation of Waste <br /> Land&mdash;Land-purchase
+ by Peasantry&mdash;Manufacturing Industry&mdash;Improvement of <br />
+ Agricultural Methods&mdash;Indications of Progress. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0032"> CHAPTER XXXII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXXII <br /> THE ZEMSTVO AND THE LOCAL SELF-GOVERNMENT <br />
+ Necessity of Reorganising the Provincial Administration&mdash;Zemstvo
+ Created <br /> in 1864&mdash;My First Acquaintance with the Institution&mdash;District
+ and <br /> Provincial Assemblies&mdash;The Leading Members&mdash;Great
+ Expectations Created <br /> by the Institution&mdash;These Expectations
+ Not Realised&mdash;Suspicions and <br /> Hostility of the Bureaucracy&mdash;Zemstvo
+ Brought More Under Control of the <br /> Centralised Administration&mdash;What
+ It Has Really Done&mdash;Why It Has Not <br /> Done More&mdash;-Rapid
+ Increase of the Rates&mdash;How Far the Expenditure <br /> Is Judicious&mdash;Why
+ the Impoverishment of the Peasantry Was <br /> Neglected&mdash;Unpractical,
+ Pedantic Spirit&mdash;Evil Consequences&mdash;Chinese and <br /> Russian
+ Formalism&mdash;Local Self-Government of Russia Contrasted with That
+ <br /> of England&mdash;Zemstvo Better than Its Predecessors&mdash;Its
+ Future. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0033"> CHAPTER XXXIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXXIII <br /> THE NEW LAW COURTS <br /> Judicial Procedure in the
+ Olden Times&mdash;Defects and Abuses&mdash;Radical <br /> Reform&mdash;The
+ New System&mdash;Justices of the Peace and Monthly Sessions&mdash;The
+ <br /> Regular Tribunals&mdash;Court of Revision&mdash;Modification of
+ the Original <br /> Plan&mdash;How Does the System Work?&mdash;Rapid
+ Acclimatisation&mdash;The Bench&mdash;The <br /> Jury&mdash;Acquittal of
+ Criminals Who Confess Their Crimes&mdash;Peasants, <br /> Merchants, and
+ Nobles as Jurymen&mdash;Independence and Political <br /> Significance of
+ the New Courts. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0034"> CHAPTER XXXIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXXIV <br /> REVOLUTIONARY NIHILISM AND THE REACTION <br /> The
+ Reform-enthusiasm Becomes Unpractical and Culminates in <br /> Nihilism&mdash;Nihilism,
+ the Distorted Reflection of Academic Western <br /> Socialism&mdash;Russia
+ Well Prepared for Reception of Ultra-Socialist <br /> Virus&mdash;Social
+ Reorganisation According to Latest Results of <br /> Science&mdash;Positivist
+ Theory&mdash;Leniency of Press-censure&mdash;Chief <br /> Representatives
+ of New Movement&mdash;Government Becomes Alarmed&mdash;Repressive <br />
+ Measures&mdash;Reaction in the Public&mdash;The Term Nihilist Invented&mdash;The
+ <br /> Nihilist and His Theory&mdash;Further Repressive Measures&mdash;Attitude
+ of Landed <br /> Proprietors&mdash;Foundation of a Liberal Party&mdash;Liberalism
+ Checked by Polish <br /> Insurrection&mdash;Practical Reform Continued&mdash;An
+ Attempt at Regicide Forms <br /> a Turning-point of Government's Policy&mdash;Change
+ in Educational <br /> System&mdash;Decline of Nihilism. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0035"> CHAPTER XXXV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXXV <br /> SOCIALIST PROPAGANDA, REVOLUTIONARY AGITATION, AND
+ TERRORISM <br /> Closer Relations with Western Socialism&mdash;Attempts
+ to Influence <br /> the Masses&mdash;Bakunin and Lavroff&mdash;"Going in
+ among the People"&mdash;The <br /> Missionaries of Revolutionary
+ Socialism&mdash;Distinction between Propaganda <br /> and Agitation&mdash;Revolutionary
+ Pamphlets for the Common People&mdash;Aims <br /> and Motives of the
+ Propagandists&mdash;Failure of Propaganda&mdash;Energetic <br />
+ Repression&mdash;Fruitless Attempts at Agitation&mdash;Proposal to
+ Combine <br /> with Liberals&mdash;Genesis of Terrorism&mdash;My Personal
+ Relations with the <br /> Revolutionists&mdash;Shadowers and Shadowed&mdash;A
+ Series of Terrorist Crimes&mdash;A <br /> Revolutionist Congress&mdash;Unsuccessful
+ Attempts to Assassinate <br /> the Tsar&mdash;Ineffectual Attempt at
+ Conciliation by Loris <br /> Melikof&mdash;Assassination of Alexander II.&mdash;The
+ Executive Committee <br /> Shows Itself Unpractical&mdash;Widespread
+ Indignation and Severe <br /> Repression&mdash;Temporary Collapse of the
+ Revolutionary Movement&mdash;A New <br /> Revolutionary Movement in
+ Sight. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0036"> CHAPTER XXXVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXXVI <br /> INDUSTRIAL PROGRESS AND THE PROLETARIAT <br /> Russia
+ till Lately a Peasant Empire&mdash;Early Efforts to Introduce Arts and
+ <br /> Crafts&mdash;Peter the Great and His Successors&mdash;Manufacturing
+ Industry <br /> Long Remains an Exotic&mdash;The Cotton Industry&mdash;The
+ Reforms of Alexander <br /> II.&mdash;Protectionists and Free Trade&mdash;Progress
+ under High Tariffs&mdash;M. <br /> Witte's Policy&mdash;How Capital Was
+ Obtained&mdash;Increase of Exports&mdash;Foreign <br /> Firms Cross the
+ Customs Frontier&mdash;Rapid Development of Iron Industry&mdash;A <br />
+ Commercial Crisis&mdash;M. Witte's Position Undermined by Agrarians and
+ <br /> Doctrinaires&mdash;M. Plehve a Formidable Opponent&mdash;His
+ Apprehensions of <br /> Revolution&mdash;Fall of M. Witte&mdash;The
+ Industrial Proletariat <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0037"> CHAPTER XXXVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXXVII <br /> THE REVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENT IN ITS LATEST PHASE
+ <br /> Influence of Capitalism and Proletariat on the Revolutionary <br />
+ Movement&mdash;What is to be Done?&mdash;Reply of Plekhanof&mdash;A New
+ Departure&mdash;Karl <br /> Marx's Theories Applied to Russia&mdash;Beginnings
+ of a Social Democratic <br /> Movement&mdash;The Labour Troubles of
+ 1894-96 in St. Petersburg&mdash;The Social <br /> Democrats' Plan of
+ Campaign&mdash;Schism in the Party&mdash;Trade-unionism and <br />
+ Political Agitation&mdash;The Labour Troubles of 1902&mdash;How the
+ Revolutionary <br /> Groups are Differentiated from Each Other&mdash;Social
+ Democracy and <br /> Constitutionalism&mdash;Terrorism&mdash;The
+ Socialist Revolutionaries&mdash;The <br /> Militant Organisation&mdash;Attitude
+ of the Government&mdash;Factory <br /> Legislation&mdash;Government's
+ Scheme for Undermining Social <br /> Democracy&mdash;Father Gapon and His
+ Labour Association&mdash;The Great Strike in <br /> St. Petersburg&mdash;Father
+ Gapon goes over to the Revolutionaries. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0038"> CHAPTER XXXVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII <br /> TERRITORIAL EXPANSION AND FOREIGN POLICY <br />
+ Rapid Growth of Russia&mdash;Expansive Tendency of Agricultural Peoples&mdash;The
+ <br /> Russo-Slavonians&mdash;The Northern Forest and the Steppe&mdash;Colonisation&mdash;The
+ <br /> Part of the Government in the Process of Expansion&mdash;Expansion
+ towards <br /> the West&mdash;Growth of the Empire Represented in a
+ Tabular Form&mdash;Commercial <br /> Motive for Expansion&mdash;The
+ Expansive Force in the Future&mdash;Possibilities <br /> of Expansion in
+ Europe&mdash;Persia, Afghanistan, and India&mdash;Trans-Siberian <br />
+ Railway and Weltpolitik&mdash;A Grandiose Scheme&mdash;Determined
+ Opposition of <br /> Japan&mdash;Negotiations and War&mdash;Russia's
+ Imprudence Explained&mdash;Conclusion. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0039"> CHAPTER XXXIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE PRESENT SITUATION <br /> Reform or Revolution?&mdash;Reigns of
+ Alexander II. and Nicholas II. <br /> Compared and Contrasted&mdash;The
+ Present Opposition&mdash;Various Groups&mdash;The <br />
+ Constitutionalists&mdash;Zemski Sobors&mdash;The Young Tsar Dispels
+ <br /> Illusions&mdash;Liberal Frondeurs&mdash;Plehve's Repressive Policy&mdash;Discontent
+ <br /> Increased by the War&mdash;Relaxation and Wavering under Prince
+ <br /> Mirski&mdash;Reform Enthusiasm&mdash;The Constitutionalists
+ Formulate their <br /> Demands&mdash;The Social Democrats&mdash;Father
+ Gapon's Demonstration&mdash;The <br /> Socialist-Revolutionaries&mdash;The
+ Agrarian Agitators&mdash;The <br /> Subject-Nationalities&mdash;Numerical
+ Strength of the Various Groups&mdash;All <br /> United on One Point&mdash;Their
+ Different Aims&mdash;Possible Solutions of the <br /> Crisis&mdash;Difficulties
+ of Introducing Constitutional Regime&mdash;A Strong Man <br /> Wanted&mdash;Uncertainty
+ of the Future. <br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The first edition of this work, published early in January, 1877,
+ contained the concentrated results of my studies during an uninterrupted
+ residence of six years in Russia&mdash;from the beginning of 1870 to the
+ end of 1875. Since that time I have spent in the European and Central
+ Asian provinces, at different periods, nearly two years more; and in the
+ intervals I have endeavoured to keep in touch with the progress of events.
+ My observations thus extend over a period of thirty-five years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I began, a few months ago, to prepare for publication the results of
+ my more recent observations and researches, my intention was to write an
+ entirely new work under the title of "Russia in the Twentieth Century,"
+ but I soon perceived that it would be impossible to explain clearly the
+ present state of things without referring constantly to events of the
+ past, and that I should be obliged to embody in the new work a large
+ portion of the old one. The portion to be embodied grew rapidly to such
+ proportions that, in the course of a few weeks, I began to ask myself
+ whether it would not be better simply to recast and complete my old
+ material. With a view to deciding the question I prepared a list of the
+ principal changes which had taken place during the last quarter of a
+ century, and when I had marshalled them in logical order, I recognised
+ that they were neither so numerous nor so important as I had supposed.
+ Certainly there had been much progress, but it had been nearly all on the
+ old lines. Everywhere I perceived continuity and evolution; nowhere could
+ I discover radical changes and new departures. In the central and local
+ administration the reactionary policy of the latter half of Alexander
+ II.'s reign had been steadily maintained; the revolutionary movement had
+ waxed and waned, but its aims were essentially the same as of old; the
+ Church had remained in its usual somnolent condition; a grave agricultural
+ crisis affecting landed proprietors and peasants had begun, but it was
+ merely a development of a state of things which I had previously
+ described; the manufacturing industry had made gigantic strides, but they
+ were all in the direction which the most competent observers had
+ predicted; in foreign policy the old principles of guiding the natural
+ expansive forces along the lines of least resistance, seeking to reach
+ warm-water ports, and pegging out territorial claims for the future were
+ persistently followed. No doubt there were pretty clear indications of
+ more radical changes to come, but these changes must belong to the future,
+ and it is merely with the past and the present that a writer who has no
+ pretensions to being a prophet has to deal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under these circumstances it seemed to me advisable to adopt a middle
+ course. Instead of writing an entirely new work I determined to prepare a
+ much extended and amplified edition of the old one, retaining such
+ information about the past as seemed to me of permanent value, and at the
+ same time meeting as far as possible the requirements of those who wish to
+ know the present condition of the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In accordance with this view I have revised, rearranged, and supplemented
+ the old material in the light of subsequent events, and I have added five
+ entirely new chapters&mdash;three on the revolutionary movement, which has
+ come into prominence since 1877; one on the industrial progress, with
+ which the latest phase of the movement is closely connected; and one on
+ the main lines of the present situation as it appears to me at the moment
+ of going to press.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the many years which I have devoted to the study of Russia, I have
+ received unstinted assistance from many different quarters. Of the friends
+ who originally facilitated my task, and to whom I expressed my gratitude
+ in the preface and notes of the early editions, only three survive&mdash;Mme.
+ de Novikoff, M. E. I. Yakushkin, and Dr. Asher. To the numerous friends
+ who have kindly assisted me in the present edition I must express my
+ thanks collectively, but there are two who stand out from the group so
+ prominently that I may be allowed to mention them personally: these are
+ Prince Alexander Grigorievitch Stcherbatof, who supplied me with
+ voluminous materials regarding the agrarian question generally and the
+ present condition of the peasantry in particular, and M. Albert Brockhaus,
+ who placed at my disposal the gigantic Russian Encyclopaedia recently
+ published by his firm (Entsiklopeditcheski Slovar, Leipzig and St.
+ Petersburg, 1890-1904). This monumental work, in forty-one volumes, is an
+ inexhaustible storehouse of accurate and well-digested information on all
+ subjects connected with the Russian Empire, and it has often been of great
+ use to me in matters of detail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the last chapter of this edition I must claim the reader's
+ indulgence, because the meaning of the title, "the present situation,"
+ changes from day to day, and I cannot foresee what further changes may
+ occur before the work reaches the hands of the public.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LONDON, 22nd May, 1905.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ RUSSIA <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ TRAVELLING IN RUSSIA
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Railways&mdash;State Interference&mdash;River Communications&mdash;Russian
+ "Grand Tour"&mdash;The Volga&mdash;Kazan&mdash;Zhigulinskiya Gori&mdash;Finns
+ and Tartars&mdash;The Don&mdash;Difficulties of Navigation&mdash;Discomforts&mdash;Rats&mdash;Hotels
+ and Their Peculiar Customs&mdash;Roads&mdash;Hibernian Phraseology
+ Explained&mdash;Bridges&mdash;Posting&mdash;A Tarantass&mdash;Requisites
+ for Travelling&mdash;Travelling in Winter&mdash;Frostbitten&mdash;Disagreeable
+ Episodes&mdash;Scene at a Post-Station.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course travelling in Russia is no longer what it was. During the last
+ half century a vast network of railways has been constructed, and one can
+ now travel in a comfortable first-class carriage from Berlin to St.
+ Petersburg or Moscow, and thence to Odessa, Sebastopol, the Lower Volga,
+ the Caucasus, Central Asia, or Eastern Siberia. Until the outbreak of the
+ war there was a train twice a week, with through carriages, from Moscow to
+ Port Arthur. And it must be admitted that on the main lines the passengers
+ have not much to complain of. The carriages are decidedly better than in
+ England, and in winter they are kept warm by small iron stoves, assisted
+ by double windows and double doors&mdash;a very necessary precaution in a
+ land where the thermometer often descends to 30 degrees below zero. The
+ train never attains, it is true, a high rate of speed&mdash;so at least
+ English and Americans think&mdash;but then we must remember that Russians
+ are rarely in a hurry, and like to have frequent opportunities of eating
+ and drinking. In Russia time is not money; if it were, nearly all the
+ subjects of the Tsar would always have a large stock of ready money on
+ hand, and would often have great difficulty in spending it. In reality, be
+ it parenthetically remarked, a Russian with a superabundance of ready
+ money is a phenomenon rarely met with in real life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In conveying passengers at the rate of from fifteen to thirty miles an
+ hour, the railway companies do at least all that they promise; but in one
+ very important respect they do not always strictly fulfil their
+ engagements. The traveller takes a ticket for a certain town, and on
+ arriving at what he imagines to be his destination, he may find merely a
+ railway-station surrounded by fields. On making inquiries, he discovers,
+ to his disappointment, that the station is by no means identical with the
+ town bearing the same name, and that the railway has fallen several miles
+ short of fulfilling the bargain, as he understood the terms of the
+ contract. Indeed, it might almost be said that as a general rule railways
+ in Russia, like camel-drivers in certain Eastern countries, studiously
+ avoid the towns. This seems at first a strange fact. It is possible to
+ conceive that the Bedouin is so enamoured of tent life and nomadic habits
+ that he shuns a town as he would a man-trap; but surely civil engineers
+ and railway contractors have no such dread of brick and mortar. The true
+ reason, I suspect, is that land within or immediately beyond the municipal
+ barrier is relatively dear, and that the railways, being completely beyond
+ the invigorating influence of healthy competition, can afford to look upon
+ the comfort and convenience of passengers as a secondary consideration.
+ Gradually, it is true, this state of things is being improved by private
+ initiative. As the railways refuse to come to the towns, the towns are
+ extending towards the railways, and already some prophets are found bold
+ enough to predict that in the course of time those long, new, straggling
+ streets, without an inhabited hinterland, which at present try so severely
+ the springs of the ricketty droshkis, will be properly paved and kept in
+ decent repair. For my own part, I confess I am a little sceptical with
+ regard to this prediction, and I can only use a favourite expression of
+ the Russian peasants&mdash;daï Bog! God grant it may be so!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is but fair to state that in one celebrated instance neither engineers
+ nor railway contractors were directly to blame. From St. Petersburg to
+ Moscow the locomotive runs for a distance of 400 miles almost as "the
+ crow" is supposed to fly, turning neither to the right hand nor to the
+ left. For twelve weary hours the passenger in the express train looks out
+ on forest and morass, and rarely catches sight of human habitation. Only
+ once he perceives in the distance what may be called a town; it is Tver
+ which has been thus favoured, not because it is a place of importance, but
+ simply because it happened to be near the bee-line. And why was the
+ railway constructed in this extraordinary fashion? For the best of all
+ reasons&mdash;because the Tsar so ordered it. When the preliminary survey
+ was being made, Nicholas I. learned that the officers entrusted with the
+ task&mdash;and the Minister of Ways and Roads in the number&mdash;were
+ being influenced more by personal than technical considerations, and he
+ determined to cut the Gordian knot in true Imperial style. When the
+ Minister laid before him the map with the intention of explaining the
+ proposed route, he took a ruler, drew a straight line from the one
+ terminus to the other, and remarked in a tone that precluded all
+ discussion, "You will construct the line so!" And the line was so
+ constructed&mdash;remaining to all future ages, like St. Petersburg and
+ the Pyramids, a magnificent monument of autocratic power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Formerly this well-known incident was often cited in whispered philippics
+ to illustrate the evils of the autocratic form of government. Imperial
+ whims, it was said, over-ride grave economic considerations. In recent
+ years, however, a change seems to have taken place in public opinion, and
+ some people now assert that this so-called Imperial whim was an act of
+ far-seeing policy. As by far the greater part of the goods and passengers
+ are carried the whole length of the line, it is well that the line should
+ be as short as possible, and that branch lines should be constructed to
+ the towns lying to the right and left. Evidently there is a good deal to
+ be said in favour of this view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the development of the railway system there has been another disturbing
+ cause, which is not likely to occur to the English mind. In England,
+ individuals and companies habitually act according to their private
+ interests, and the State interferes as little as possible; private
+ initiative does as it pleases, unless the authorities can prove that
+ important bad consequences will necessarily result. In Russia, the onus
+ probandi lies on the other side; private initiative is allowed to do
+ nothing until it gives guarantees against all possible bad consequences.
+ When any great enterprise is projected, the first question is&mdash;"How
+ will this new scheme affect the interests of the State?" Thus, when the
+ course of a new railway has to be determined, the military authorities are
+ among the first to be consulted, and their opinion has a great influence
+ on the ultimate decision. The natural consequence is that the railway-map
+ of Russia presents to the eye of the strategist much that is quite
+ unintelligible to the ordinary observer&mdash;a fact that will become
+ apparent even to the uninitiated as soon as a war breaks out in Eastern
+ Europe. Russia is no longer what she was in the days of the Crimean War,
+ when troops and stores had to be conveyed hundreds of miles by the most
+ primitive means of transport. At that time she had only 750 miles of
+ railway; now she has over 36,000 miles, and every year new lines are
+ constructed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The water-communication has likewise in recent years been greatly
+ improved. On the principal rivers there are now good steamers.
+ Unfortunately, the climate puts serious obstructions in the way of
+ navigation. For nearly half of the year the rivers are covered with ice,
+ and during a great part of the open season navigation is difficult. When
+ the ice and snow melt the rivers overflow their banks and lay a great part
+ of the low-lying country under water, so that many villages can only be
+ approached in boats; but very soon the flood subsides, and the water falls
+ so rapidly that by midsummer the larger steamers have great difficulty in
+ picking their way among the sandbanks. The Neva alone&mdash;that queen of
+ northern rivers&mdash;has at all times a plentiful supply of water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the Neva, the rivers commonly visited by the tourist are the Volga
+ and the Don, which form part of what may be called the Russian grand tour.
+ Englishmen who wish to see something more than St. Petersburg and Moscow
+ generally go by rail to Nizhni-Novgorod, where they visit the great fair,
+ and then get on board one of the Volga steamers. For those who have
+ mastered the important fact that Russia is not a country of fine scenery,
+ the voyage down the river is pleasant enough. The left bank is as flat as
+ the banks of the Rhine below Cologne, but the right bank is high,
+ occasionally well wooded, and not devoid of a certain tame
+ picturesqueness. Early on the second day the steamer reaches Kazan, once
+ the capital of an independent Tartar khanate, and still containing a
+ considerable Tartar population. Several metchets (as the Mahometan houses
+ of prayer are here termed), with their diminutive minarets in the lower
+ part of the town, show that Islamism still survives, though the khanate
+ was annexed to Muscovy more than three centuries ago; but the town, as a
+ whole, has a European rather than an Asiatic character. If any one visits
+ it in the hope of getting "a glimpse of the East," he will be grievously
+ disappointed, unless, indeed, he happens to be one of those imaginative
+ tourists who always discover what they wish to see. And yet it must be
+ admitted that, of all the towns on the route, Kazan is the most
+ interesting. Though not Oriental, it has a peculiar character of its own,
+ whilst all the others&mdash;Simbirsk, Samara, Saratof&mdash;are as
+ uninteresting as Russian provincial towns commonly are. The full force and
+ solemnity of that expression will be explained in the sequel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Probably about sunrise on the third day something like a range of
+ mountains will appear on the horizon. It may be well to say at once, to
+ prevent disappointment, that in reality nothing worthy of the name of
+ mountain is to be found in that part of the country. The nearest
+ mountain-range in that direction is the Caucasus, which is hundreds of
+ miles distant, and consequently cannot by any possibility be seen from the
+ deck of a steamer. The elevations in question are simply a low range of
+ hills, called the Zhigulinskiya Gori. In Western Europe they would not
+ attract much attention, but "in the kingdom of the blind," as the French
+ proverb has it, "the one-eyed man is king"; and in a flat region like
+ Eastern Russia these hills form a prominent feature. Though they have
+ nothing of Alpine grandeur, yet their well-wooded slopes, coming down to
+ the water's edge&mdash;especially when covered with the delicate tints of
+ early spring, or the rich yellow and red of autumnal foliage&mdash;leave
+ an impression on the memory not easily effaced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the whole&mdash;with all due deference to the opinions of my patriotic
+ Russian friends&mdash;I must say that Volga scenery hardly repays the
+ time, trouble and expense which a voyage from Nizhni to Tsaritsin demands.
+ There are some pretty bits here and there, but they are "few and far
+ between." A glass of the most exquisite wine diluted with a gallon of
+ water makes a very insipid beverage. The deck of the steamer is generally
+ much more interesting than the banks of the river. There one meets with
+ curious travelling companions. The majority of the passengers are probably
+ Russian peasants, who are always ready to chat freely without demanding a
+ formal introduction, and to relate&mdash;with certain restrictions&mdash;to
+ a new acquaintance the simple story of their lives. Often I have thus
+ whiled away the weary hours both pleasantly and profitably, and have
+ always been impressed with the peasant's homely common sense, good-natured
+ kindliness, half-fatalistic resignation, and strong desire to learn
+ something about foreign countries. This last peculiarity makes him
+ question as well as communicate, and his questions, though sometimes
+ apparently childish, are generally to the point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the passengers are probably also some representatives of the various
+ Finnish tribes inhabiting this part of the country; they may be
+ interesting to the ethnologist who loves to study physiognomy, but they
+ are far less sociable than the Russians. Nature seems to have made them
+ silent and morose, whilst their conditions of life have made them shy and
+ distrustful. The Tartar, on the other hand, is almost sure to be a lively
+ and amusing companion. Most probably he is a peddler or small trader of
+ some kind. The bundle on which he reclines contains his stock-in-trade,
+ composed, perhaps, of cotton printed goods and especially bright-coloured
+ cotton handkerchiefs. He himself is enveloped in a capacious greasy
+ khalát, or dressing-gown, and wears a fur cap, though the thermometer may
+ be at 90 degrees in the shade. The roguish twinkle in his small piercing
+ eyes contrasts strongly with the sombre, stolid expression of the Finnish
+ peasants sitting near him. He has much to relate about St. Petersburg,
+ Moscow, and perhaps Astrakhan; but, like a genuine trader, he is very
+ reticent regarding the mysteries of his own craft. Towards sunset he
+ retires with his companions to some quiet spot on the deck to recite
+ evening prayers. Here all the good Mahometans on board assemble and stroke
+ their beards, kneel on their little strips of carpet and prostrate
+ themselves, all keeping time as if they were performing some new kind of
+ drill under the eve of a severe drill-sergeant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the voyage is made about the end of September, when the traders are
+ returning home from the fair at Nizhni-Novgorod, the ethnologist will have
+ a still better opportunity of study. He will then find not only
+ representatives of the Finnish and Tartar races, but also Armenians,
+ Circassians, Persians, Bokhariots, and other Orientals&mdash;a motley and
+ picturesque but decidedly unsavoury cargo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However great the ethnographical variety on board may be, the traveller
+ will probably find that four days on the Volga are quite enough for all
+ practical and aesthetic purposes, and instead of going on to Astrakhan he
+ will quit the steamer at Tsaritsin. Here he will find a railway of about
+ fifty miles in length, connecting the Volga and the Don. I say advisedly a
+ railway, and not a train, because trains on this line are not very
+ frequent. When I first visited the locality, thirty years ago, there were
+ only two a week, so that if you inadvertently missed one train you had to
+ wait about three days for the next. Prudent, nervous people preferred
+ travelling by the road, for on the railway the strange jolts and
+ mysterious creakings were very alarming. On the other hand the pace was so
+ slow that running off the rails would have been merely an amusing episode,
+ and even a collision could scarcely have been attended with serious
+ consequences. Happily things are improving, even in this outlying part of
+ the country. Now there is one train daily, and it goes at a less funereal
+ pace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From Kalatch, at the Don end of the line, a steamer starts for Rostoff,
+ which is situated near the mouth of the river. The navigation of the Don
+ is much more difficult than that of the Volga. The river is extremely
+ shallow, and the sand-banks are continually shifting, so that many times
+ in the course of the day the steamer runs aground. Sometimes she is got
+ off by simply reversing the engines, but not unfrequently she sticks so
+ fast that the engines have to be assisted. This is effected in a curious
+ way. The captain always gives a number of stalwart Cossacks a free passage
+ on condition that they will give him the assistance he requires; and as
+ soon as the ship sticks fast he orders them to jump overboard with a stout
+ hawser and haul her off! The task is not a pleasant one, especially as the
+ poor fellows cannot afterwards change their clothes; but the order is
+ always obeyed with alacrity and without grumbling. Cossacks, it would
+ seem, have no personal acquaintance with colds and rheumatism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the most approved manuals of geography the Don figures as one of the
+ principal European rivers, and its length and breadth give it a right to
+ be considered as such; but its depth in many parts is ludicrously out of
+ proportion to its length and breadth. I remember one day seeing the
+ captain of a large, flat-bottomed steamer slacken speed, to avoid running
+ down a man on horseback who was attempting to cross his bows in the middle
+ of the stream. Another day a not less characteristic incident happened. A
+ Cossack passenger wished to be set down at a place where there was no
+ pier, and on being informed that there was no means of landing him, coolly
+ jumped overboard and walked ashore. This simple method of disembarking
+ cannot, of course, be recommended to those who have no local knowledge
+ regarding the exact position of sand-banks and deep pools.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good serviceable fellows are those Cossacks who drag the steamer off the
+ sand-banks, and are often entertaining companions. Many of them can relate
+ from their own experience, in plain, unvarnished style, stirring episodes
+ of irregular warfare, and if they happen to be in a communicative mood
+ they may divulge a few secrets regarding their simple, primitive
+ commissariat system. Whether they are confidential or not, the traveller
+ who knows the language will spend his time more profitably and pleasantly
+ in chatting with them than in gazing listlessly at the uninteresting
+ country through which he is passing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately, these Don steamers carry a large number of free passengers
+ of another and more objectionable kind, who do not confine themselves to
+ the deck, but unceremoniously find their way into the cabin, and prevent
+ thin-skinned travellers from sleeping. I know too little of natural
+ history to decide whether these agile, bloodthirsty parasites are of the
+ same species as those which in England assist unofficially the Sanitary
+ Commissioners by punishing uncleanliness; but I may say that their
+ function in the system of created things is essentially the same, and they
+ fulfil it with a zeal and energy beyond all praise. Possessing for my own
+ part a happy immunity from their indelicate attentions, and being
+ perfectly innocent of entomological curiosity, I might, had I been alone,
+ have overlooked their existence, but I was constantly reminded of their
+ presence by less happily constituted mortals, and the complaints of the
+ sufferers received a curious official confirmation. On arriving at the end
+ of the journey I asked permission to spend the night on board, and I
+ noticed that the captain acceded to my request with more readiness and
+ warmth than I expected. Next morning the fact was fully explained. When I
+ began to express my thanks for having been allowed to pass the night in a
+ comfortable cabin, my host interrupted me with a good-natured laugh, and
+ assured me that, on the contrary, he was under obligations to me. "You
+ see," he said, assuming an air of mock gravity, "I have always on board a
+ large body of light cavalry, and when I have all this part of the ship to
+ myself they make a combined attack on me; whereas, when some one is
+ sleeping close by, they divide their forces!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On certain steamers on the Sea of Azof the privacy of the sleeping-cabin
+ is disturbed by still more objectionable intruders; I mean rats. During
+ one short voyage which I made on board the Kertch, these disagreeable
+ visitors became so importunate in the lower regions of the vessel that the
+ ladies obtained permission to sleep in the deck-saloon. After this
+ arrangement had been made, we unfortunate male passengers received
+ redoubled attention from our tormentors. Awakened early one morning by the
+ sensation of something running over me as I lay in my berth, I conceived a
+ method of retaliation. It seemed to me possible that, in the event of
+ another visit, I might, by seizing the proper moment, kick the rat up to
+ the ceiling with such force as to produce concussion of the brain and
+ instant death. Very soon I had an opportunity of putting my plan into
+ execution. A significant shaking of the little curtain at the foot of the
+ berth showed that it was being used as a scaling-ladder. I lay perfectly
+ still, quite as much interested in the sport as if I had been waiting,
+ rifle in hand, for big game. Soon the intruder peeped into my berth,
+ looked cautiously around him, and then proceeded to walk stealthily across
+ my feet. In an instant he was shot upwards. First was heard a sharp knock
+ on the ceiling, and then a dull "thud" on the floor. The precise extent of
+ the injuries inflicted I never discovered, for the victim had sufficient
+ strength and presence of mind to effect his escape; and the gentleman at
+ the other side of the cabin, who had been roused by the noise, protested
+ against my repeating the experiment, on the ground that, though he was
+ willing to take his own share of the intruders, he strongly objected to
+ having other people's rats kicked into his berth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On such occasions it is of no use to complain to the authorities. When I
+ met the captain on deck I related to him what had happened, and protested
+ vigorously against passengers being exposed to such annoyances. After
+ listening to me patiently, he coolly replied, entirely overlooking my
+ protestations, "Ah! I did better than that this morning; I allowed my rat
+ to get under the blanket, and then smothered him!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Railways and steamboats, even when their arrangements leave much to be
+ desired, invariably effect a salutary revolution in hotel accommodation;
+ but this revolution is of necessity gradual. Foreign hotelkeepers must
+ immigrate and give the example; suitable houses must be built; servants
+ must be properly trained; and, above all, the native travellers must learn
+ the usages of civilised society. In Russia this revolution is in progress,
+ but still far from being complete. The cities where foreigners most do
+ congregate&mdash;St. Petersburg, Moscow, Odessa&mdash;already possess
+ hotels that will bear comparison with those of Western Europe, and some of
+ the more important provincial towns can offer very respectable
+ accommodation; but there is still much to be done before the West-European
+ can travel with comfort even on the principal routes. Cleanliness, the
+ first and most essential element of comfort, as we understand the term, is
+ still a rare commodity, and often cannot be procured at any price.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even in good hotels, when they are of the genuine Russian type, there are
+ certain peculiarities which, though not in themselves objectionable,
+ strike a foreigner as peculiar. Thus, when you alight at such an hotel,
+ you are expected to examine a considerable number of rooms, and to inquire
+ about the respective prices. When you have fixed upon a suitable
+ apartment, you will do well, if you wish to practise economy, to propose
+ to the landlord considerably less than he demands; and you will generally
+ find, if you have a talent for bargaining, that the rooms may be hired for
+ somewhat less than the sum first stated. You must be careful, however, to
+ leave no possibility of doubt as to the terms of the contract. Perhaps you
+ assume that, as in taking a cab, a horse is always supplied without
+ special stipulation, so in hiring a bedroom the bargain includes a bed and
+ the necessary appurtenances. Such an assumption will not always be
+ justified. The landlord may perhaps give you a bedstead without extra
+ charge, but if he be uncorrupted by foreign notions, he will certainly not
+ spontaneously supply you with bed-linen, pillows, blankets, and towels. On
+ the contrary, he will assume that you carry all these articles with you,
+ and if you do not, you must pay for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This ancient custom has produced among Russians of the old school a kind
+ of fastidiousness to which we are strangers. They strongly dislike using
+ sheets, blankets, and towels which are in a certain sense public property,
+ just as we should strongly object to putting on clothes which had been
+ already worn by other people. And the feeling may be developed in people
+ not Russian by birth. For my own part, I confess to having been conscious
+ of a certain disagreeable feeling on returning in this respect to the
+ usages of so-called civilised Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inconvenience of carrying about the essential articles of bedroom
+ furniture is by no means so great as might be supposed. Bedrooms in Russia
+ are always heated during cold weather, so that one light blanket, which
+ may be also used as a railway rug, is quite sufficient, whilst sheets,
+ pillow-cases, and towels take up little space in a portmanteau. The most
+ cumbrous object is the pillow, for air-cushions, having a disagreeable
+ odour, are not well suited for the purpose. But Russians are accustomed to
+ this encumbrance. In former days&mdash;as at the present time in those
+ parts of the country where there are neither railways nor macadamised
+ roads&mdash;people travelled in carts or carriages without springs and in
+ these instruments of torture a huge pile of cushions or pillows is
+ necessary to avoid contusions and dislocations. On the railways the jolts
+ and shaking are not deadly enough to require such an antidote; but, even
+ in unconservative Russia, customs outlive the conditions that created
+ them; and at every railway-station you may see men and women carrying
+ about their pillows with them as we carry wraps. A genuine Russian
+ merchant who loves comfort and respects tradition may travel without a
+ portmanteau, but he considers his pillow as an indispensable article de
+ voyage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To return to the old-fashioned hotel. When you have completed the
+ negotiations with the landlord, you will notice that, unless you have a
+ servant with you, the waiter prepares to perform the duties of valet de
+ chambre. Do not be surprised at his officiousness, which seems founded on
+ the assumption that you are three-fourths paralysed. Formerly, every
+ well-born Russian had a valet always in attendance, and never dreamed of
+ doing for himself anything which could by any possibility be done for him.
+ You notice that there is no bell in the room, and no mechanical means of
+ communicating with the world below stairs. That is because the attendant
+ is supposed to be always within call, and it is so much easier to shout
+ than to get up and ring the bell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the good old times all this was quite natural. The well-born Russian
+ had commonly a superabundance of domestic serfs, and there was no reason
+ why one or two of them should not accompany their master when his Honour
+ undertook a journey. An additional person in the tarantass did not
+ increase the expense, and considerably diminished the little unavoidable
+ inconveniences of travel. But times have changed. In 1861 the domestic
+ serfs were emancipated by Imperial ukaz. Free servants demand wages; and
+ on railways or steamers a single ticket does not include an attendant. The
+ present generation must therefore get through life with a more modest
+ supply of valets, and must learn to do with its own hands much that was
+ formerly performed by serf labour. Still, a gentleman brought up in the
+ old conditions cannot be expected to dress himself without assistance, and
+ accordingly the waiter remains in your room to act as valet. Perhaps, too,
+ in the early morning you may learn in an unpleasant way that other parts
+ of the old system are not yet extinct. You may hear, for instance,
+ resounding along the corridors such an order as&mdash;"Petrusha! Petrusha!
+ Stakán vodý!" ("Little Peter, little Peter, a glass of water!") shouted in
+ a stentorian voice that would startle the Seven Sleepers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the toilet operations are completed, and you order tea&mdash;one
+ always orders tea in Russia&mdash;you will be asked whether you have your
+ own tea and sugar with you. If you are an experienced traveller you will
+ be able to reply in the affirmative, for good tea can be bought only in
+ certain well-known shops, and can rarely be found in hotels. A huge,
+ steaming tea-urn, called a samovar&mdash;etymologically, a "self-boiler"&mdash;will
+ be brought in, and you will make your tea according to your taste. The
+ tumbler, you know of course, is to be used as a cup, and when using it you
+ must be careful not to cauterise the points of your fingers. If you should
+ happen to have anything eatable or drinkable in your travelling basket,
+ you need not hesitate to take it out at once, for the waiter will not feel
+ at all aggrieved or astonished at your doing nothing "for the good of the
+ house." The twenty or twenty-five kopeks that you pay for the samovar&mdash;teapot,
+ tumbler, saucer, spoon, and slop-basin being included under the generic
+ term pribor&mdash;frees you from all corkage and similar dues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These and other remnants of old customs are now rapidly disappearing, and
+ will, doubtless, in a very few years be things of the past&mdash;things to
+ be picked up in out-of-the-way corners, and chronicled by social
+ archaeology; but they are still to be found in towns not unknown to
+ Western Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of these old customs, and especially the old method of travelling,
+ may be studied in their pristine purity throughout a great part of the
+ country. Though railway construction has been pushed forward with great
+ energy during the last forty years, there are still vast regions where the
+ ancient solitudes have never been disturbed by the shrill whistle of the
+ locomotive, and roads have remained in their primitive condition. Even in
+ the central provinces one may still travel hundreds of miles without ever
+ encountering anything that recalls the name of Macadam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If popular rumour is to be trusted, there is somewhere in the Highlands of
+ Scotland, by the side of a turnpike, a large stone bearing the following
+ doggerel inscription:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you had seen this road before it was made, You'd lift up your hands
+ and bless General Wade."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Any educated Englishman reading this strange announcement would naturally
+ remark that the first line of the couplet contains a logical
+ contradiction, probably of Hibernian origin; but I have often thought,
+ during my wanderings in Russia, that the expression, if not logically
+ justifiable, might for the sake of vulgar convenience be legalised by a
+ Permissive Bill. The truth is that, as a Frenchman might say, "there are
+ roads and roads"&mdash;roads made and roads unmade, roads artificial and
+ roads natural. Now, in Russia, roads are nearly all of the unmade, natural
+ kind, and are so conservative in their nature that they have at the
+ present day precisely the same appearance as they had many centuries ago.
+ They have thus for imaginative minds something of what is called "the
+ charm of historical association." The only perceptible change that takes
+ place in them during a series of generations is that the ruts shift their
+ position. When these become so deep that fore-wheels can no longer fathom
+ them, it becomes necessary to begin making a new pair of ruts to the right
+ or left of the old ones; and as the roads are commonly of gigantic
+ breadth, there is no difficulty in finding a place for the operation. How
+ the old ones get filled up I cannot explain; but as I have rarely seen in
+ any part of the country, except perhaps in the immediate vicinity of
+ towns, a human being engaged in road repairing, I assume that beneficent
+ Nature somehow accomplishes the task without human assistance, either by
+ means of alluvial deposits, or by some other cosmical action only known to
+ physical geographers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the roads one occasionally encounters bridges; and here, again, I have
+ discovered in Russia a key to the mysteries of Hibernian phraseology. An
+ Irish member once declared to the House of Commons that the Church was
+ "the bridge that separated the two great sections of the Irish people." As
+ bridges commonly connect rather than separate, the metaphor was received
+ with roars of laughter. If the honourable members who joined in the
+ hilarious applause had travelled much in Russia, they would have been more
+ moderate in their merriment; for in that country, despite the laudable
+ activity of the modern system of local administration created in the
+ sixties, bridges often act still as a barrier rather than a connecting
+ link, and to cross a river by a bridge may still be what is termed in
+ popular phrase "a tempting of Providence." The cautious driver will
+ generally prefer to take to the water, if there is a ford within a
+ reasonable distance, though both he and his human load may be obliged, in
+ order to avoid getting wet feet, to assume undignified postures that would
+ afford admirable material for the caricaturist. But this little bit of
+ discomfort, even though the luggage should be soaked in the process of
+ fording, is as nothing compared to the danger of crossing by the bridge.
+ As I have no desire to harrow unnecessarily the feelings of the reader, I
+ refrain from all description of ugly accidents, ending in bruises and
+ fractures, and shall simply explain in a few words how a successful
+ passage is effected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it is possible to approach the bridge without sinking up to the knees
+ in mud, it is better to avoid all risks by walking over and waiting for
+ the vehicle on the other side; and when this is impossible, a preliminary
+ survey is advisable. To your inquiries whether it is safe, your yamstchik
+ (post-boy) is sure to reply, "Nitchevo!"&mdash;a word which, according to
+ the dictionaries, means "nothing" but which has, in the mouths of the
+ peasantry, a great variety of meanings, as I may explain at some future
+ time. In the present case it may be roughly translated. "There is no
+ danger." "Nitchevo, Barin, proyedem" ("There is no danger, sir; we shall
+ get over"), he repeats. You may refer to the generally rotten appearance
+ of the structure, and point in particular to the great holes sufficient to
+ engulf half a post-horse. "Ne bos', Bog pomozhet" ("Do not fear. God will
+ help"), replies coolly your phlegmatic Jehu. You may have your doubts as
+ to whether in this irreligious age Providence will intervene specially for
+ your benefit; but your yamstchik, who has more faith or fatalism, leaves
+ you little time to solve the problem. Making hurriedly the sign of the
+ cross, he gathers up his reins, waves his little whip in the air, and,
+ shouting lustily, urges on his team. The operation is not wanting in
+ excitement. First there is a short descent; then the horses plunge wildly
+ through a zone of deep mud; next comes a fearful jolt, as the vehicle is
+ jerked up on to the first planks; then the transverse planks, which are
+ but loosely held in their places, rattle and rumble ominously, as the
+ experienced, sagacious animals pick their way cautiously and gingerly
+ among the dangerous holes and crevices; lastly, you plunge with a horrible
+ jolt into a second mud zone, and finally regain terra firma, conscious of
+ that pleasant sensation which a young officer may be supposed to feel
+ after his first cavalry charge in real warfare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course here, as elsewhere, familiarity breeds indifference. When you
+ have successfully crossed without serious accident a few hundred bridges
+ of this kind you learn to be as cool and fatalistic as your yamstchik.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader who has heard of the gigantic reforms that have been repeatedly
+ imposed on Russia by a paternal Government may naturally be astonished to
+ learn that the roads are still in such a disgraceful condition. But for
+ this, as for everything else in the world, there is a good and sufficient
+ reason. The country is still, comparatively speaking, thinly populated,
+ and in many regions it is difficult, or practically impossible, to procure
+ in sufficient quantity stone of any kind, and especially hard stone fit
+ for road-making. Besides this, when roads are made, the severity of the
+ climate renders it difficult to keep them in good repair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When a long journey has to be undertaken through a region in which there
+ are no railways, there are several ways in which it may be effected. In
+ former days, when time was of still less value than at present, many
+ landed proprietors travelled with their own horses, and carried with them,
+ in one or more capacious, lumbering vehicles, all that was required for
+ the degree of civilisation which they had attained; and their requirements
+ were often considerable. The grand seigneur, for instance, who spent the
+ greater part of his life amidst the luxury of the court society, naturally
+ took with him all the portable elements of civilisation. His baggage
+ included, therefore, camp-beds, table-linen, silver plate, a batterie de
+ cuisine, and a French cook. The pioneers and part of the commissariat
+ force were sent on in advance, so that his Excellency found at each
+ halting-place everything prepared for his arrival. The poor owner of a few
+ dozen serfs dispensed, of course, with the elaborate commissariat
+ department, and contented himself with such modest fare as could be packed
+ in the holes and corners of a single tarantass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be well to explain here, parenthetically, what a tarantass is, for
+ I shall often have occasion to use the word. It may be briefly defined as
+ a phaeton without springs. The function of springs is imperfectly
+ fulfilled by two parallel wooden bars, placed longitudinally, on which is
+ fixed the body of the vehicle. It is commonly drawn by three horses&mdash;a
+ strong, fast trotter in the shafts, flanked on each side by a light,
+ loosely-attached horse that goes along at a gallop. The points of the
+ shafts are connected by the duga, which looks like a gigantic, badly
+ formed horseshoe rising high above the collar of the trotter. To the top
+ of the duga is attached the bearing-rein, and underneath the highest part
+ of it is fastened a big bell&mdash;in the southern provinces I found two,
+ and sometimes even three bells&mdash;which, when the country is open and
+ the atmosphere still, may be heard a mile off. The use of the bell is
+ variously explained. Some say it is in order to frighten the wolves, and
+ others that it is to avoid collisions on the narrow forest-paths. But
+ neither of these explanations is entirely satisfactory. It is used chiefly
+ in summer, when there is no danger of an attack from wolves; and the
+ number of bells is greater in the south, where there are no forests.
+ Perhaps the original intention was&mdash;I throw out the hint for the
+ benefit of a certain school of archaeologists&mdash;to frighten away evil
+ spirits; and the practice has been retained partly from unreasoning
+ conservatism, and partly with a view to lessen the chances of collisions.
+ As the roads are noiselessly soft, and the drivers not always vigilant,
+ the dangers of collision are considerably diminished by the ceaseless
+ peal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Altogether, the tarantass is well adapted to the conditions in which it is
+ used. By the curious way in which the horses are harnessed it recalls the
+ war-chariot of ancient times. The horse in the shafts is compelled by the
+ bearing-rein to keep his head high and straight before him&mdash;though
+ the movement of his ears shows plainly that he would very much like to put
+ it somewhere farther away from the tongue of the bell&mdash;but the side
+ horses gallop freely, turning their heads outwards in classical fashion. I
+ believe that this position is assumed not from any sympathy on the part of
+ these animals for the remains of classical art, but rather from the
+ natural desire to keep a sharp eye on the driver. Every movement of his
+ right hand they watch with close attention, and as soon as they discover
+ any symptoms indicating an intention of using the whip they immediately
+ show a desire to quicken the pace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now that the reader has gained some idea of what a tarantass is, we may
+ return to the modes of travelling through the regions which are not yet
+ supplied with railways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However enduring and long-winded horses may be, they must be allowed
+ sometimes, during a long journey, to rest and feed. Travelling long
+ distances with one's own horses is therefore necessarily a slow operation,
+ and is now quite antiquated. People who value their time prefer to make
+ use of the Imperial Post organisation. On all the principal lines of
+ communication there are regular post-stations, at from ten to twenty miles
+ apart, where a certain number of horses and vehicles are kept for the
+ convenience of travellers. To enjoy the privilege of this arrangement, one
+ has to apply to the proper authorities for a podorozhnaya&mdash;a large
+ sheet of paper stamped with the Imperial Eagle, and bearing the name of
+ the recipient, the destination, and the number of horses to be supplied.
+ In return, a small sum is paid for imaginary road-repairs; the rest of the
+ sum is paid by instalments at the respective stations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Armed with this document you go to the post-station and demand the
+ requisite number of horses. Three is the number generally used, but if you
+ travel lightly and are indifferent to appearances, you may content
+ yourself with a pair. The vehicle is a kind of tarantass, but not such as
+ I have just described. The essentials in both are the same, but those
+ which the Imperial Government provides resemble an enormous cradle on
+ wheels rather than a phaeton. An armful of hay spread over the bottom of
+ the wooden box is supposed to play the part of seats and cushions. You are
+ expected to sit under the arched covering, and extend your legs so that
+ the feet lie beneath the driver's seat; but it is advisable, unless the
+ rain happens to be coming down in torrents, to get this covering
+ unshipped, and travel without it. When used, it painfully curtails the
+ little freedom of movement that you enjoy, and when you are shot upwards
+ by some obstruction on the road it is apt to arrest your ascent by giving
+ you a violent blow on the top of the head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is to be hoped that you are in no hurry to start, otherwise your
+ patience may be sorely tried. The horses, when at last produced, may seem
+ to you the most miserable screws that it was ever your misfortune to
+ behold; but you had better refrain from expressing your feelings, for if
+ you use violent, uncomplimentary language, it may turn out that you have
+ been guilty of gross calumny. I have seen many a team composed of animals
+ which a third-class London costermonger would have spurned, and in which
+ it was barely possible to recognise the equine form, do their duty in
+ highly creditable style, and go along at the rate of ten or twelve miles
+ an hour, under no stronger incentive then the voice of the yamstchik.
+ Indeed, the capabilities of these lean, slouching, ungainly quadrupeds are
+ often astounding when they are under the guidance of a man who knows how
+ to drive them. Though such a man commonly carries a little harmless whip,
+ he rarely uses it except by waving it horizontally in the air. His
+ incitements are all oral. He talks to his cattle as he would to animals of
+ his own species&mdash;now encouraging them by tender, caressing epithets,
+ and now launching at them expressions of indignant scorn. At one moment
+ they are his "little doves," and at the next they have been transformed
+ into "cursed hounds." How far they understand and appreciate this curious
+ mixture of endearing cajolery and contemptuous abuse it is difficult to
+ say, but there is no doubt that it somehow has upon them a strange and
+ powerful influence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Any one who undertakes a journey of this kind should possess a well-knit,
+ muscular frame and good tough sinews, capable of supporting an unlimited
+ amount of jolting and shaking; at the same time he should be well inured
+ to all the hardships and discomforts incidental to what is vaguely termed
+ "roughing it." When he wishes to sleep in a post-station, he will find
+ nothing softer than a wooden bench, unless he can induce the keeper to put
+ for him on the floor a bundle of hay, which is perhaps softer, but on the
+ whole more disagreeable than the deal board. Sometimes he will not get
+ even the wooden bench, for in ordinary post-stations there is but one room
+ for travellers, and the two benches&mdash;there are rarely more&mdash;may
+ be already occupied. When he does obtain a bench, and succeeds in falling
+ asleep, he must not be astonished if he is disturbed once or twice during
+ the night by people who use the apartment as a waiting-room whilst the
+ post-horses are being changed. These passers-by may even order a samovar,
+ and drink tea, chat, laugh, smoke, and make themselves otherwise
+ disagreeable, utterly regardless of the sleepers. Then there are the other
+ intruders, smaller in size but equally objectionable, of which I have
+ already spoken when describing the steamers on the Don. Regarding them I
+ desire to give merely one word of advice: As you will have abundant
+ occupation in the work of self-defence, learn to distinguish between
+ belligerents and neutrals, and follow the simple principle of
+ international law, that neutrals should not be molested. They may be very
+ ugly, but ugliness does not justify assassination. If, for instance, you
+ should happen in awaking to notice a few black or brown beetles running
+ about your pillow, restrain your murderous hand! If you kill them you
+ commit an act of unnecessary bloodshed; for though they may playfully
+ scamper around you, they will do you no bodily harm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another requisite for a journey in unfrequented districts is a knowledge
+ of the language. It is popularly supposed that if you are familiar with
+ French and German you may travel anywhere in Russia. So far as the great
+ cities and chief lines of communication are concerned, this may be true,
+ but beyond that it is a delusion. The Russian has not, any more than the
+ West-European, received from Nature the gift of tongues. Educated Russians
+ often speak one or two foreign languages fluently, but the peasants know
+ no language but their own, and it is with the peasantry that one comes in
+ contact. And to converse freely with the peasant requires a considerable
+ familiarity with the language&mdash;far more than is required for simply
+ reading a book. Though there are few provincialisms, and all classes of
+ the people use the same words&mdash;except the words of foreign origin,
+ which are used only by the upper classes&mdash;the peasant always speaks
+ in a more laconic and more idiomatic way than the educated man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the winter months travelling is in some respects pleasanter than in
+ summer, for snow and frost are great macadamisers. If the snow falls
+ evenly, there is for some time the most delightful road that can be
+ imagined. No jolts, no shaking, but a smooth, gliding motion, like that of
+ a boat in calm water, and the horses gallop along as if totally
+ unconscious of the sledge behind them. Unfortunately, this happy state of
+ things does not last all through the winter. The road soon gets cut up,
+ and deep transverse furrows (ukhaby) are formed. How these furrows come
+ into existence I have never been able clearly to comprehend, though I have
+ often heard the phenomenon explained by men who imagined they understood
+ it. Whatever the cause and mode of formation may be, certain it is that
+ little hills and valleys do get formed, and the sledge, as it crosses over
+ them, bobs up and down like a boat in a chopping sea, with this important
+ difference, that the boat falls into a yielding liquid, whereas the sledge
+ falls upon a solid substance, unyielding and unelastic. The shaking and
+ jolting which result may readily be imagined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are other discomforts, too, in winter travelling. So long as the air
+ is perfectly still, the cold may be very intense without being
+ disagreeable; but if a strong head wind is blowing, and the thermometer
+ ever so many degrees below zero, driving in an open sledge is a very
+ disagreeable operation, and noses may get frostbitten without their owners
+ perceiving the fact in time to take preventive measures. Then why not take
+ covered sledges on such occasions? For the simple reason that they are not
+ to be had; and if they could be procured, it would be well to avoid using
+ them, for they are apt to produce something very like seasickness. Besides
+ this, when the sledge gets overturned, it is pleasanter to be shot out on
+ to the clean, refreshing snow than to be buried ignominiously under a pile
+ of miscellaneous baggage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief requisite for winter travelling in these icy regions is a
+ plentiful supply of warm furs. An Englishman is very apt to be imprudent
+ in this respect, and to trust too much to his natural power of resisting
+ cold. To a certain extent this confidence is justifiable, for an
+ Englishman often feels quite comfortable in an ordinary great coat when
+ his Russian friends consider it necessary to envelop themselves in furs of
+ the warmest kind; but it may be carried too far, in which case severe
+ punishment is sure to follow, as I once learned by experience. I may
+ relate the incident as a warning to others:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day in mid-winter I started from Novgorod, with the intention of
+ visiting some friends at a cavalry barracks situated about ten miles from
+ the town. As the sun was shining brightly, and the distance to be
+ traversed was short, I considered that a light fur and a bashlyk&mdash;a
+ cloth hood which protects the ears&mdash;would be quite sufficient to keep
+ out the cold, and foolishly disregarded the warnings of a Russian friend
+ who happened to call as I was about to start. Our route lay along the
+ river due northward, right in the teeth of a strong north wind. A wintry
+ north wind is always and everywhere a disagreeable enemy to face; let the
+ reader try to imagine what it is when the Fahrenheit thermometer is at 30
+ degrees below zero&mdash;or rather let him refrain from such an attempt,
+ for the sensation produced cannot be imagined by those who have not
+ experienced it. Of course I ought to have turned back&mdash;at least, as
+ soon as a sensation of faintness warned me that the circulation was being
+ seriously impeded&mdash;but I did not wish to confess my imprudence to the
+ friend who accompanied me. When we had driven about three-fourths of the
+ way we met a peasant-woman, who gesticulated violently, and shouted
+ something to us as we passed. I did not hear what she said, but my friend
+ turned to me and said in an alarming tone&mdash;we had been speaking
+ German&mdash;"Mein Gott! Ihre Nase ist abgefroren!" Now the word
+ "abgefroren," as the reader will understand, seemed to indicate that my
+ nose was frozen off, so I put up my hand in some alarm to discover whether
+ I had inadvertently lost the whole or part of the member referred to. It
+ was still in situ and entire, but as hard and insensible as a bit of wood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You may still save it," said my companion, "if you get out at once and
+ rub it vigorously with snow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I got out as directed, but was too faint to do anything vigorously. My fur
+ cloak flew open, the cold seemed to grasp me in the region of the heart,
+ and I fell insensible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How long I remained unconscious I know not. When I awoke I found myself in
+ a strange room, surrounded by dragoon officers in uniform, and the first
+ words I heard were, "He is out of danger now, but he will have a fever."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These words were spoken, as I afterwards discovered, by a very competent
+ surgeon; but the prophecy was not fulfilled. The promised fever never
+ came. The only bad consequences were that for some days my right hand
+ remained stiff, and for a week or two I had to conceal my nose from public
+ view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If this little incident justifies me in drawing a general conclusion, I
+ should say that exposure to extreme cold is an almost painless form of
+ death; but that the process of being resuscitated is very painful indeed&mdash;so
+ painful, that the patient may be excused for momentarily regretting that
+ officious people prevented the temporary insensibility from becoming "the
+ sleep that knows no waking."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between the alternate reigns of winter and summer there is always a short
+ interregnum, during which travelling in Russia by road is almost
+ impossible. Woe to the ill-fated mortal who has to make a long
+ road-journey immediately after the winter snow has melted; or, worse
+ still, at the beginning of winter, when the autumn mud has been petrified
+ by the frost, and not yet levelled by the snow!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At all seasons the monotony of a journey is pretty sure to be broken by
+ little unforeseen episodes of a more or less disagreeable kind. An axle
+ breaks, or a wheel comes off, or there is a difficulty in procuring
+ horses. As an illustration of the graver episodes which may occur, I shall
+ make here a quotation from my note-book:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the morning we arrived at Maikop, a small town commanding the
+ entrance to one of the valleys which run up towards the main range of the
+ Caucasus. On alighting at the post-station, we at once ordered horses for
+ the next stage, and received the laconic reply, "There are no horses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And when will there be some?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To-morrow!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This last reply we took for a piece of playful exaggeration, and demanded
+ the book in which, according to law, the departure of horses is duly
+ inscribed, and from which it is easy to calculate when the first team
+ should be ready to start. A short calculation proved that we ought to get
+ horses by four o'clock in the afternoon, so we showed the station-keeper
+ various documents signed by the Minister of the Interior and other
+ influential personages, and advised him to avoid all contravention of the
+ postal regulations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These documents, which proved that we enjoyed the special protection of
+ the authorities, had generally been of great service to us in our dealings
+ with rascally station-keepers; but this station-keeper was not one of the
+ ordinary type. He was a Cossack, of herculean proportions, with a
+ bullet-shaped head, short-cropped bristly hair, shaggy eyebrows, an
+ enormous pendent moustache, a defiant air, and a peculiar expression of
+ countenance which plainly indicated "an ugly customer." Though it was
+ still early in the day, he had evidently already imbibed a considerable
+ quantity of alcohol, and his whole demeanour showed clearly enough that he
+ was not of those who are "pleasant in their liquor." After glancing
+ superciliously at the documents, as if to intimate he could read them were
+ he so disposed, he threw them down on the table, and, thrusting his
+ gigantic paws into his capacious trouser-pockets, remarked slowly and
+ decisively, in something deeper than a double-bass voice, "You'll have
+ horses to-morrow morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wishing to avoid a quarrel we tried to hire horses in the village, and
+ when our efforts in that direction proved fruitless, we applied to the
+ head of the rural police. He came and used all his influence with the
+ refractory station-keeper, but in vain. Hercules was not in a mood to
+ listen to officials any more than to ordinary mortals. At last, after
+ considerable trouble to himself, our friend of the police contrived to
+ find horses for us, and we contented ourselves with entering an account of
+ the circumstances in the Complaint Book, but our difficulties were by no
+ means at an end. As soon as Hercules perceived that we had obtained horses
+ without his assistance, and that he had thereby lost his opportunity of
+ blackmailing us, he offered us one of his own teams, and insisted on
+ detaining us until we should cancel the complaint against him. This we
+ refused to do, and our relations with him became what is called in
+ diplomatic language "extremement tendues." Again we had to apply to the
+ police.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My friend mounted guard over the baggage whilst I went to the police
+ office. I was not long absent, but I found, on my return, that important
+ events had taken place in the interval. A crowd had collected round the
+ post-station, and on the steps stood the keeper and his post-boys,
+ declaring that the traveller inside had attempted to shoot them! I rushed
+ in and soon perceived, by the smell of gunpowder, that firearms had been
+ used, but found no trace of casualties. My friend was tramping up and down
+ the little room, and evidently for the moment there was an armistice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a very short time the local authorities had assembled, a candle had
+ been lit, two armed Cossacks stood as sentries at the door, and the
+ preliminary investigation had begun. The Chief of Police sat at the table
+ and wrote rapidly on a sheet of foolscap. The investigation showed that
+ two shots had been fired from a revolver, and two bullets were found
+ imbedded in the wall. All those who had been present, and some who knew
+ nothing of the incident except by hearsay, were duly examined. Our
+ opponents always assumed that my friend had been the assailant, in spite
+ of his protestations to the contrary, and more than once the words
+ pokyshenie na ubiistvo (attempt to murder) were pronounced. Things looked
+ very black indeed. We had the prospect of being detained for days and
+ weeks in the miserable place, till the insatiable demon of official
+ formality had been propitiated. And then?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When things were thus at their blackest they suddenly took an unexpected
+ turn, and the deus ex machinâ appeared precisely at the right moment, just
+ as if we had all been puppets in a sensation novel. There was the usual
+ momentary silence, and then, mixed with the sound of an approaching
+ tarantass, a confused murmur: "There he is! He is coming!" The "he" thus
+ vaguely and mysteriously indicated turned out to be an official of the
+ judicial administration, who had reason to visit the village for an
+ entirely different affair. As soon as he had been told briefly what had
+ happened he took the matter in hand and showed himself equal to the
+ occasion. Unlike the majority of Russian officials he disliked lengthy
+ procedure, and succeeded in making the case quite clear in a very short
+ time. There had been, he perceived, no attempt to murder or anything of
+ the kind. The station-keeper and his two post-boys, who had no right to be
+ in the traveller's room, had entered with threatening mien, and when they
+ refused to retire peaceably, my friend had fired two shots in order to
+ frighten them and bring assistance. The falsity of their statement that he
+ had fired at them as they entered the room was proved by the fact that the
+ bullets were lodged near the ceiling in the wall farthest away from the
+ door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I must confess that I was agreeably surprised by this unexpected turn of
+ affairs. The conclusions arrived at were nothing more than a simple
+ statement of what had taken place; but I was surprised at the fact that a
+ man who was at once a lawyer and a Russian official should have been able
+ to take such a plain, commonsense view of the case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before midnight we were once more free men, driving rapidly in the clear
+ moonlight to the next station, under the escort of a fully-armed
+ Circassian Cossack; but the idea that we might have been detained for
+ weeks in that miserable place haunted us like a nightmare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ IN THE NORTHERN FORESTS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Bird's-eye View of Russia&mdash;The Northern Forests&mdash;Purpose of my
+ Journey&mdash;Negotiations&mdash;The Road&mdash;A Village&mdash;A
+ Peasant's House&mdash;Vapour-Baths&mdash;Curious Custom&mdash;Arrival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are many ways of describing a country that one has visited. The
+ simplest and most common method is to give a chronological account of the
+ journey; and this is perhaps the best way when the journey does not extend
+ over more than a few weeks. But it cannot be conveniently employed in the
+ case of a residence of many years. Did I adopt it, I should very soon
+ exhaust the reader's patience. I should have to take him with me to a
+ secluded village, and make him wait for me till I had learned to speak the
+ language. Thence he would have to accompany me to a provincial town, and
+ spend months in a public office, whilst I endeavoured to master the
+ mysteries of local self-government. After this he would have to spend two
+ years with me in a big library, where I studied the history and literature
+ of the country. And so on, and so on. Even my journeys would prove tedious
+ to him, as they often were to myself, for he would have to drive with me
+ many a score of weary miles, where even the most zealous diary-writer
+ would find nothing to record beyond the names of the post-stations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be well for me, then, to avoid the strictly chronological method,
+ and confine myself to a description of the more striking objects and
+ incidents that came under my notice. The knowledge which I derived from
+ books will help me to supply a running commentary on what I happened to
+ see and hear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of beginning in the usual way with St. Petersburg, I prefer for
+ many reasons to leave the description of the capital till some future
+ time, and plunge at once into the great northern forest region.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If it were possible to get a bird's-eye view of European Russia, the
+ spectator would perceive that the country is composed of two halves widely
+ differing from each other in character. The northern half is a land of
+ forest and morass, plentifully supplied with water in the form of rivers,
+ lakes, and marshes, and broken up by numerous patches of cultivation. The
+ southern half is, as it were, the other side of the pattern&mdash;an
+ immense expanse of rich, arable land, broken up by occasional patches of
+ sand or forest. The imaginary undulating line separating those two regions
+ starts from the western frontier about the 50th parallel of latitude, and
+ runs in a northeasterly direction till it enters the Ural range at about
+ 56 degrees N.L.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well do I remember my first experience of travel in the northern region,
+ and the weeks of voluntary exile which formed the goal of the journey. It
+ was in the summer of 1870. My reason for undertaking the journey was this:
+ a few months of life in St. Petersburg had fully convinced me that the
+ Russian language is one of those things which can only be acquired by
+ practice, and that even a person of antediluvian longevity might spend all
+ his life in that city without learning to express himself fluently in the
+ vernacular&mdash;especially if he has the misfortune of being able to
+ speak English, French, and German. With his friends and associates he
+ speaks French or English. German serves as a medium of communication with
+ waiters, shop keepers, and other people of that class. It is only with
+ isvoshtchiki&mdash;the drivers of the little open droshkis which fulfil
+ the function of cabs&mdash;that he is obliged to use the native tongue,
+ and with them a very limited vocabulary suffices. The ordinal numerals and
+ four short, easily-acquired expressions&mdash;poshól (go on), na právo (to
+ the right), na lyévo (to the left), and stoi (stop)&mdash;are all that is
+ required.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst I was considering how I could get beyond the sphere of
+ West-European languages, a friend came to my assistance, and suggested
+ that I should go to his estate in the province of Novgorod, where I should
+ find an intelligent, amiable parish priest, quite innocent of any
+ linguistic acquirements. This proposal I at once adopted, and accordingly
+ found myself one morning at a small station of the Moscow Railway,
+ endeavouring to explain to a peasant in sheep's clothing that I wished to
+ be conveyed to Ivanofka, the village where my future teacher lived. At
+ that time I still spoke Russian in a very fragmentary and confused way&mdash;pretty
+ much as Spanish cows are popularly supposed to speak French. My first
+ remark therefore being literally interpreted, was&mdash;"Ivanofka. Horses.
+ You can?" The point of interrogation was expressed by a simultaneous
+ raising of the voice and the eyebrows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ivanofka?" cried the peasant, in an interrogatory tone of voice. In
+ Russia, as in other countries, the peasantry when speaking with strangers
+ like to repeat questions, apparently for the purpose of gaining time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ivanofka," I replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After some reflection the peasant nodded and said something which I did
+ not understand, but which I assumed to mean that he was open to consider
+ proposals for transporting me to my destination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Roubles. How many?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To judge by the knitting of the brows and the scratching of the head, I
+ should say that that question gave occasion to a very abstruse
+ mathematical calculation. Gradually the look of concentrated attention
+ gave place to an expression such as children assume when they endeavour to
+ get a parental decision reversed by means of coaxing. Then came a stream
+ of soft words which were to me utterly unintelligible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I must not weary the reader with a detailed account of the succeeding
+ negotiations, which were conducted with extreme diplomatic caution on both
+ sides, as if a cession of territory or the payment of a war indemnity had
+ been the subject of discussion. Three times he drove away and three times
+ returned. Each time he abated his pretensions, and each time I slightly
+ increased my offer. At last, when I began to fear that he had finally
+ taken his departure and had left me to my own devices, he re-entered the
+ room and took up my baggage, indicating thereby that he agreed to my last
+ offer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sum agreed upon would have been, under ordinary circumstances, more
+ than sufficient, but before proceeding far I discovered that the
+ circumstances were by no means ordinary, and I began to understand the
+ pantomimic gesticulation which had puzzled me during the negotiations.
+ Heavy rain had fallen without interruption for several days, and now the
+ track on which we were travelling could not, without poetical license, be
+ described as a road. In some parts it resembled a water-course, in others
+ a quagmire, and at least during the first half of the journey I was
+ constantly reminded of that stage in the work of creation when the water
+ was not yet separated from the dry land. During the few moments when the
+ work of keeping my balance and preventing my baggage from being lost did
+ not engross all my attention, I speculated on the possibility of inventing
+ a boat-carriage, to be drawn by some amphibious quadruped. Fortunately our
+ two lean, wiry little horses did not object to being used as aquatic
+ animals. They took the water bravely, and plunged through the mud in
+ gallant style. The telega in which we were seated&mdash;a four-wheeled
+ skeleton cart&mdash;did not submit to the ill-treatment so silently. It
+ creaked out its remonstrances and entreaties, and at the more difficult
+ spots threatened to go to pieces; but its owner understood its character
+ and capabilities, and paid no attention to its ominous threats. Once,
+ indeed, a wheel came off, but it was soon fished out of the mud and
+ replaced, and no further casualty occurred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The horses did their work so well that when about midday we arrived at a
+ village, I could not refuse to let them have some rest and refreshment&mdash;all
+ the more as my own thoughts had begun to turn in that direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The village, like villages in that part of the country generally,
+ consisted of two long parallel rows of wooden houses. The road&mdash;if a
+ stratum of deep mud can be called by that name&mdash;formed the
+ intervening space. All the houses turned their gables to the passerby, and
+ some of them had pretensions to architectural decoration in the form of
+ rude perforated woodwork. Between the houses, and in a line with them,
+ were great wooden gates and high wooden fences, separating the courtyards
+ from the road. Into one of these yards, near the farther end of the
+ village, our horses turned of their own accord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "An inn?" I said, in an interrogative tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The driver shook his head and said something, in which I detected the word
+ "friend." Evidently there was no hostelry for man and beast in the
+ village, and the driver was using a friend's house for the purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The yard was flanked on the one side by an open shed, containing rude
+ agricultural implements which might throw some light on the agriculture of
+ the primitive Aryans, and on the other side by the dwelling-house and
+ stable. Both the house and stable were built of logs, nearly cylindrical
+ in form, and placed in horizontal tiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two of the strongest of human motives, hunger and curiosity, impelled me
+ to enter the house at once. Without waiting for an invitation, I went up
+ to the door&mdash;half protected against the winter snows by a small open
+ portico&mdash;and unceremoniously walked in. The first apartment was
+ empty, but I noticed a low door in the wall to the left, and passing
+ through this, entered the principal room. As the scene was new to me, I
+ noted the principal objects. In the wall before me were two small square
+ windows looking out upon the road, and in the corner to the right, nearer
+ to the ceiling than to the floor, was a little triangular shelf, on which
+ stood a religious picture. Before the picture hung a curious oil lamp. In
+ the corner to the left of the door was a gigantic stove, built of brick,
+ and whitewashed. From the top of the stove to the wall on the right
+ stretched what might be called an enormous shelf, six or eight feet in
+ breadth. This is the so-called palati, as I afterwards discovered, and
+ serves as a bed for part of the family. The furniture consisted of a long
+ wooden bench attached to the wall on the right, a big, heavy, deal table,
+ and a few wooden stools.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst I was leisurely surveying these objects, I heard a noise on the top
+ of the stove, and, looking up, perceived a human face, with long hair
+ parted in the middle, and a full yellow beard. I was considerably
+ astonished by this apparition, for the air in the room was stifling, and I
+ had some difficulty in believing that any created being&mdash;except
+ perhaps a salamander or a negro&mdash;could exist in such a position. I
+ looked hard to convince myself that I was not the victim of a delusion. As
+ I stared, the head nodded slowly and pronounced the customary form of
+ greeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I returned the greeting slowly, wondering what was to come next.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ill, very ill!" sighed the head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm not astonished at that," I remarked, in an "aside." "If I were lying
+ on the stove as you are I should be very ill too."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hot, very hot?" I remarked, interrogatively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nitchevo"&mdash;that is to say, "not particularly." This remark
+ astonished me all the more as I noticed that the body to which the head
+ belonged was enveloped in a sheep-skin!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After living some time in Russia I was no longer surprised by such
+ incidents, for I soon discovered that the Russian peasant has a marvellous
+ power of bearing extreme heat as well as extreme cold. When a coachman
+ takes his master or mistress to the theatre or to a party, he never thinks
+ of going home and returning at an appointed time. Hour after hour he sits
+ placidly on the box, and though the cold be of an intensity such as is
+ never experienced in our temperate climate, he can sleep as tranquilly as
+ the lazzaroni at midday in Naples. In that respect the Russian peasant
+ seems to be first-cousin to the polar bear, but, unlike the animals of the
+ Arctic regions, he is not at all incommoded by excessive heat. On the
+ contrary, he likes it when he can get it, and never omits an opportunity
+ of laying in a reserve supply of caloric. He even delights in rapid
+ transitions from one extreme to the other, as is amply proved by a curious
+ custom which deserves to be recorded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader must know that in the life of the Russian peasantry the weekly
+ vapour-bath plays a most important part. It has even a certain religious
+ signification, for no good orthodox peasant would dare to enter a church
+ after being soiled by certain kinds of pollution without cleansing himself
+ physically and morally by means of the bath. In the weekly arrangements it
+ forms the occupation for Saturday afternoon, and care is taken to avoid
+ thereafter all pollution until after the morning service on Sunday. Many
+ villages possess a public or communal bath of the most primitive
+ construction, but in some parts of the country&mdash;I am not sure how far
+ the practice extends&mdash;the peasants take their vapour-bath in the
+ household oven in which the bread is baked! In all cases the operation is
+ pushed to the extreme limit of human endurance&mdash;far beyond the utmost
+ limit that can be endured by those who have not been accustomed to it from
+ childhood. For my own part, I only made the experiment once; and when I
+ informed my attendant that my life was in danger from congestion of the
+ brain, he laughed outright, and told me that the operation had only begun.
+ Most astounding of all&mdash;and this brings me to the fact which led me
+ into this digression&mdash;the peasants in winter often rush out of the
+ bath and roll themselves in the snow! This aptly illustrates a common
+ Russian proverb, which says that what is health to the Russian is death to
+ the German.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cold water, as well as hot vapour, is sometimes used as a means of
+ purification. In the villages the old pagan habit of masquerading in
+ absurd costumes at certain seasons&mdash;as is done during the carnival in
+ Roman Catholic countries with the approval, or at least connivance, of the
+ Church&mdash;still survives; but it is regarded as not altogether sinless.
+ He who uses such disguises places himself to a certain extent under the
+ influence of the Evil One, thereby putting his soul in jeopardy; and to
+ free himself from this danger he has to purify himself in the following
+ way: When the annual mid-winter ceremony of blessing the waters is
+ performed, by breaking a hole in the ice and immersing a cross with
+ certain religious rites, he should plunge into the hole as soon as
+ possible after the ceremony. I remember once at Yaroslavl, on the Volga,
+ two young peasants successfully accomplished this feat&mdash;though the
+ police have orders to prevent it&mdash;and escaped, apparently without
+ evil consequences, though the Fahrenheit thermometer was below zero. How
+ far the custom has really a purifying influence, is a question which must
+ be left to theologians; but even an ordinary mortal can understand that,
+ if it be regarded as a penance, it must have a certain deterrent effect.
+ The man who foresees the necessity of undergoing this severe penance will
+ think twice before putting on a disguise. So at least it must have been in
+ the good old times; but in these degenerate days&mdash;among the Russian
+ peasantry as elsewhere&mdash;the fear of the Devil, which was formerly, if
+ not the beginning, at least one of the essential elements, of wisdom, has
+ greatly decreased. Many a young peasant will now thoughtlessly disguise
+ himself, and when the consecration of the water is performed, will stand
+ and look on passively like an ordinary spectator! It would seem that the
+ Devil, like his enemy the Pope, is destined to lose gradually his temporal
+ power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all this time I am neglecting my new acquaintance on the top of the
+ stove. In reality I did not neglect him, but listened most attentively to
+ every word of the long tale that he recited. What it was all about I could
+ only vaguely guess, for I did not understand more than ten per cent of the
+ words used, but I assumed from the tone and gestures that he was relating
+ to me all the incidents and symptoms of his illness. And a very severe
+ illness it must have been, for it requires a very considerable amount of
+ physical suffering to make the patient Russian peasant groan. Before he
+ had finished his tale a woman entered, apparently his wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To her I explained that I had a strong desire to eat and drink, and that I
+ wished to know what she would give me. By a good deal of laborious
+ explanation I was made to understand that I could have eggs, black bread,
+ and milk, and we agreed that there should be a division of labour: my
+ hostess should prepare the samovar for boiling water, whilst I should fry
+ the eggs to my own satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few minutes the repast was ready, and, though not very delicate, was
+ highly acceptable. The tea and sugar I had of course brought with me; the
+ eggs were not very highly flavoured; and the black rye-bread, strongly
+ intermixed with sand, could be eaten by a peculiar and easily-acquired
+ method of mastication, in which the upper molars are never allowed to
+ touch those of the lower jaw. In this way the grating of the sand between
+ the teeth is avoided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eggs, black bread, milk, and tea&mdash;these formed my ordinary articles
+ of food during all my wanderings in Northern Russia. Occasionally potatoes
+ could be got, and afforded the possibility of varying the bill of fare.
+ The favourite materials employed in the native cookery are sour cabbage,
+ cucumbers, and kvass&mdash;a kind of very small beer made from black
+ bread. None of these can be recommended to the traveller who is not
+ already accustomed to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remainder of the journey was accomplished at a rather more rapid pace
+ than the preceding part, for the road was decidedly better, though it was
+ traversed by numerous half-buried roots, which produced violent jolts.
+ From the conversation of the driver I gathered that wolves, bears, and
+ elks were found in the forest through which we were passing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun had long since set when we reached our destination, and I found to
+ my dismay that the priest's house was closed for the night. To rouse the
+ reverend personage from his slumbers, and endeavour to explain to him with
+ my limited vocabulary the object of my visit, was not to be thought of. On
+ the other hand, there was no inn of any kind in the vicinity. When I
+ consulted the driver as to what was to be done, he meditated for a little,
+ and then pointed to a large house at some distance where there were still
+ lights. It turned out to be the country-house of the gentleman who had
+ advised me to undertake the journey, and here, after a short explanation,
+ though the owner was not at home, I was hospitably received.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been my intention to live in the priest's house, but a short
+ interview with him on the following day convinced me that that part of my
+ plan could not be carried out. The preliminary objections that I should
+ find but poor fare in his humble household, and much more of the same
+ kind, were at once put aside by my assurance, made partly by pantomime,
+ that, as an old traveller, I was well accustomed to simple fare, and could
+ always accommodate myself to the habits of people among whom my lot
+ happened to be cast. But there was a more serious difficulty. The priest's
+ family had, as is generally the case with priests' families, been rapidly
+ increasing during the last few years, and his house had not been growing
+ with equal rapidity. The natural consequence of this was that he had not a
+ room or a bed to spare. The little room which he had formerly kept for
+ occasional visitors was now occupied by his eldest daughter, who had
+ returned from a "school for the daughters of the clergy," where she had
+ been for the last two years. Under these circumstances, I was constrained
+ to accept the kind proposal made to me by the representative of my absent
+ friend, that I should take up my quarters in one of the numerous
+ unoccupied rooms in the manor-house. This arrangement, I was reminded,
+ would not at all interfere with my proposed studies, for the priest lived
+ close at hand, and I might spend with him as much time as I liked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now let me introduce the reader to my reverend teacher and one or two
+ other personages whose acquaintance I made during my voluntary exile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ VOLUNTARY EXILE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Ivanofka&mdash;History of the Place&mdash;The Steward of the Estate&mdash;Slav
+ and Teutonic Natures&mdash;A German's View of the Emancipation&mdash;Justices
+ of the Peace&mdash;New School of Morals&mdash;The Russian Language&mdash;Linguistic
+ Talent of the Russians&mdash;My Teacher&mdash;A Big Dose of Current
+ History.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This village, Ivanofka by name, in which I proposed to spend some months,
+ was rather more picturesque than villages in these northern forests
+ commonly are. The peasants' huts, built on both sides of a straight road,
+ were colourless enough, and the big church, with its five pear-shaped
+ cupolas rising out of the bright green roof and its ugly belfry in the
+ Renaissance style, was not by any means beautiful in itself; but when seen
+ from a little distance, especially in the soft evening twilight, the whole
+ might have been made the subject of a very pleasing picture. From the
+ point that a landscape-painter would naturally have chosen, the foreground
+ was formed by a meadow, through which flowed sluggishly a meandering
+ stream. On a bit of rising ground to the right, and half concealed by an
+ intervening cluster of old rich-coloured pines, stood the manor-house&mdash;a
+ big, box-shaped, whitewashed building, with a verandah in front,
+ overlooking a small plot that might some day become a flower-garden. To
+ the left of this stood the village, the houses grouping prettily with the
+ big church, and a little farther in this direction was an avenue of
+ graceful birches. On the extreme left were fields, bounded by a dark
+ border of fir-trees. Could the spectator have raised himself a few hundred
+ feet from the ground, he would have seen that there were fields beyond the
+ village, and that the whole of this agricultural oasis was imbedded in a
+ forest stretching in all directions as far as the eye could reach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The history of the place may be told in a few words. In former times the
+ estate, including the village and all its inhabitants, had belonged to a
+ monastery, but when, in 1764, the Church lands were secularised by
+ Catherine, it became the property of the State. Some years afterwards the
+ Empress granted it, with the serfs and everything else which it contained,
+ to an old general who had distinguished himself in the Turkish wars. From
+ that time it had remained in the K&mdash;&mdash; family. Some time between
+ the years 1820 and 1840 the big church and the mansion-house had been
+ built by the actual possessor's father, who loved country life, and
+ devoted a large part of his time and energies to the management of his
+ estate. His son, on the contrary, preferred St. Petersburg to the country,
+ served in one of the public offices, loved passionately French plays and
+ other products of urban civilisation, and left the entire management of
+ the property to a German steward, popularly known as Karl Karl'itch, whom
+ I shall introduce to the reader presently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The village annals contained no important events, except bad harvests,
+ cattle-plagues, and destructive fires, with which the inhabitants seem to
+ have been periodically visited from time immemorial. If good harvests were
+ ever experienced, they must have faded from the popular recollection. Then
+ there were certain ancient traditions which might have been lessened in
+ bulk and improved in quality by being subjected to searching historical
+ criticism. More than once, for instance, a leshie, or wood-sprite, had
+ been seen in the neighbourhood; and in several households the domovoi, or
+ brownie, had been known to play strange pranks until he was properly
+ propitiated. And as a set-off against these manifestations of evil powers,
+ there were well-authenticated stories about a miracle-working image that
+ had mysteriously appeared on the branch of a tree, and about numerous
+ miraculous cures that had been effected by means of pilgrimages to holy
+ shrines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is time to introduce the principal personages of this little
+ community. Of these, by far the most important was Karl Karl'itch, the
+ steward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First of all I ought, perhaps, to explain how Karl Schmidt, the son of a
+ well-to-do Bauer in the Prussian village of Schonhausen, became Karl
+ Karl'itch, the principal personage in the Russian village of Ivanofka.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the time of the Crimean War many of the Russian landed proprietors
+ had become alive to the necessity of improving the primitive, traditional
+ methods of agriculture, and sought for this purpose German stewards for
+ their estates. Among these proprietors was the owner of Ivanofka. Through
+ the medium of a friend in Berlin he succeeded in engaging for a moderate
+ salary a young man who had just finished his studies in one of the German
+ schools of agriculture&mdash;the institution at Hohenheim, if my memory
+ does not deceive me. This young man had arrived in Russia as plain Karl
+ Schmidt, but his name was soon transformed into Karl Karl'itch, not from
+ any desire of his own, but in accordance with a curious Russian custom. In
+ Russia one usually calls a man not by his family name, but by his
+ Christian name and patronymic&mdash;the latter being formed from the name
+ of his father. Thus, if a man's name is Nicholas, and his father's
+ Christian name is&mdash;or was&mdash;Ivan, you address him as Nikolai
+ Ivanovitch (pronounced Ivan'itch); and if this man should happen to have a
+ sister called Mary, you will address her&mdash;even though she should be
+ married&mdash;as Marya Ivanovna (pronounced Ivanna).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Immediately on his arrival young Schmidt had set himself vigorously to
+ reorganise the estate and improve the method of agriculture. Some ploughs,
+ harrows, and other implements which had been imported at a former period
+ were dragged out of the obscurity in which they had lain for several
+ years, and an attempt was made to farm on scientific principles. The
+ attempt was far from being completely successful, for the serfs&mdash;this
+ was before the Emancipation&mdash;could not be made to work like regularly
+ trained German labourers. In spite of all admonitions, threats, and
+ punishments, they persisted in working slowly, listlessly, inaccurately,
+ and occasionally they broke the new instruments from carelessness or some
+ more culpable motive. Karl Karl'itch was not naturally a hard-hearted man,
+ but he was very rigid in his notions of duty, and could be cruelly severe
+ when his orders were not executed with an accuracy and punctuality that
+ seemed to the Russian rustic mind mere useless pedantry. The serfs did not
+ offer him any open opposition, and were always obsequiously respectful in
+ their demeanour towards him, but they invariably frustrated his plans by
+ their carelessness and stolid, passive resistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus arose that silent conflict and that smouldering mutual enmity which
+ almost always result from the contact of the Teuton with the Slav. The
+ serfs instinctively regretted the good old times, when they lived under
+ the rough-and-ready patriarchal rule of their masters, assisted by a
+ native "burmister," or overseer, who was one of themselves. The burmister
+ had not always been honest in his dealings with them, and the master had
+ often, when in anger, ordered severe punishments to be inflicted; but the
+ burmister had not attempted to make them change their old habits, and had
+ shut his eyes to many little sins of omission and commission, whilst the
+ master was always ready to assist them in difficulties, and commonly
+ treated them in a kindly, familiar way. As the old Russian proverb has it,
+ "Where danger is, there too is kindly forgiveness." Karl Karl'itch, on the
+ contrary, was the personification of uncompassionate, inflexible law.
+ Blind rage and compassionate kindliness were alike foreign to his system
+ of government. If he had any feeling towards the serfs, it was one of
+ chronic contempt. The word durak (blockhead) was constantly on his lips,
+ and when any bit of work was well done, he took it as a matter of course,
+ and never thought of giving a word of approval or encouragement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it became evident, in 1859, that the emancipation of the serfs was at
+ hand, Karl Karl'itch confidently predicted that the country would
+ inevitably go to ruin. He knew by experience that the peasants were lazy
+ and improvident, even when they lived under the tutelage of a master, and
+ with the fear of the rod before their eyes. What would they become when
+ this guidance and salutary restraint should be removed? The prospect
+ raised terrible forebodings in the mind of the worthy steward, who had his
+ employer's interests really at heart; and these forebodings were
+ considerably increased and intensified when he learned that the peasants
+ were to receive by law the land which they occupied on sufferance, and
+ which comprised about a half of the whole arable land of the estate. This
+ arrangement he declared to be a dangerous and unjustifiable infraction of
+ the sacred rights of property, which savoured strongly of communism, and
+ could have but one practical result: the emancipated peasants would live
+ by the cultivation of their own land, and would not consent on any terms
+ to work for their former master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the few months which immediately followed the publication of the
+ Emancipation Edict in 1861, Karl Karl'itch found much to confirm his most
+ gloomy apprehensions. The peasants showed themselves dissatisfied with the
+ privileges conferred upon them, and sought to evade the corresponding
+ duties imposed on them by the new law. In vain he endeavoured, by
+ exhortations, promises, and threats, to get the most necessary part of the
+ field-work done, and showed the peasants the provision of the law
+ enjoining them to obey and work as of old until some new arrangement
+ should be made. To all his appeals they replied that, having been freed by
+ the Tsar, they were no longer obliged to work for their former master; and
+ he was at last forced to appeal to the authorities. This step had a
+ certain effect, but the field-work was executed that year even worse than
+ usual, and the harvest suffered in consequence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since that time things had gradually improved. The peasants had discovered
+ that they could not support themselves and pay their taxes from the land
+ ceded to them, and had accordingly consented to till the proprietor's
+ fields for a moderate recompense. "These last two years," said Karl
+ Karl'itch to me, with an air of honest self-satisfaction, "I have been
+ able, after paying all expenses, to transmit little sums to the young
+ master in St. Petersburg. It was certainly not much, but it shows that
+ things are better than they were. Still, it is hard, uphill work. The
+ peasants have not been improved by liberty. They now work less and drink
+ more than they did in the times of serfage, and if you say a word to them
+ they'll go away, and not work for you at all." Here Karl Karl'itch
+ indemnified himself for his recent self-control in the presence of his
+ workers by using a series of the strongest epithets which the combined
+ languages of his native and of his adopted country could supply. "But
+ laziness and drunkenness are not their only faults. They let their cattle
+ wander into our fields, and never lose an opportunity of stealing firewood
+ from the forest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you have now for such matters the rural justices of the peace," I
+ ventured to suggest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The justices of the peace!" . . . Here Karl Karl'itch used an inelegant
+ expression, which showed plainly that he was no unqualified admirer of the
+ new judicial institutions. "What is the use of applying to the justices?
+ The nearest one lives six miles off, and when I go to him he evidently
+ tries to make me lose as much time as possible. I am sure to lose nearly a
+ whole day, and at the end of it I may find that I have got nothing for my
+ pains. These justices always try to find some excuse for the peasant, and
+ when they do condemn, by way of exception, the affair does not end there.
+ There is pretty sure to be a pettifogging practitioner prowling about&mdash;some
+ rascally scribe who has been dismissed from the public offices for
+ pilfering and extorting too openly&mdash;and he is always ready to whisper
+ to the peasant that he should appeal. The peasant knows that the decision
+ is just, but he is easily persuaded that by appealing to the Monthly
+ Sessions he gets another chance in the lottery, and may perhaps draw a
+ prize. He lets the rascally scribe, therefore, prepare an appeal for him,
+ and I receive an invitation to attend the Session of Justices in the
+ district town on a certain day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a good five-and-thirty miles to the district town, as you know, but
+ I get up early, and arrive at eleven o'clock, the hour stated in the
+ official notice. A crowd of peasants are hanging about the door of the
+ court, but the only official present is the porter. I enquire of him when
+ my case is likely to come on, and receive the laconic answer, 'How should
+ I know?' After half an hour the secretary arrives. I repeat my question,
+ and receive the same answer. Another half hour passes, and one of the
+ justices drives up in his tarantass. Perhaps he is a glib-tongued
+ gentleman, and assures me that the proceedings will commence at once: 'Sei
+ tchas! sei tchas!' Don't believe what the priest or the dictionary tells
+ you about the meaning of that expression. The dictionary will tell you
+ that it means 'immediately,' but that's all nonsense. In the mouth of a
+ Russian it means 'in an hour,' 'next week,' 'in a year or two,' 'never'&mdash;most
+ commonly 'never.' Like many other words in Russian, 'sei tchas' can be
+ understood only after long experience. A second justice drives up, and
+ then a third. No more are required by law, but these gentlemen must first
+ smoke several cigarettes and discuss all the local news before they begin
+ work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At last they take their seats on the bench&mdash;a slightly elevated
+ platform at one end of the room, behind a table covered with green baize&mdash;and
+ the proceedings commence. My case is sure to be pretty far down on the
+ list&mdash;the secretary takes, I believe, a malicious pleasure in
+ watching my impatience&mdash;and before it is called the justices have to
+ retire at least once for refreshments and cigarettes. I have to amuse
+ myself by listening to the other cases, and some of them, I can assure
+ you, are amusing enough. The walls of that room must be by this time
+ pretty well saturated with perjury, and many of the witnesses catch at
+ once the infection. Perhaps I may tell you some other time a few of the
+ amusing incidents that I have seen there. At last my case is called. It is
+ as clear as daylight, but the rascally pettifogger is there with a
+ long-prepared speech, he holds in his hand a small volume of the codified
+ law, and quotes paragraphs which no amount of human ingenuity can make to
+ bear upon the subject. Perhaps the previous decision is confirmed; perhaps
+ it is reversed; in either case, I have lost a second day and exhausted
+ more patience than I can conveniently spare. And something even worse may
+ happen, as I know by experience. Once during a case of mine there was some
+ little informality&mdash;someone inadvertently opened the door of the
+ consulting-room when the decision was being written, or some other little
+ incident of the sort occurred, and the rascally pettifogger complained to
+ the Supreme Court of Revision, which is a part of the Senate. The case was
+ all about a few roubles, but it was discussed in St. Petersburg, and
+ afterwards tried over again by another court of justices. Now I have paid
+ my Lehrgeld, and go no more to law."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then you must expose yourself to all kinds of extortion?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not so much as you might imagine. I have my own way of dispensing
+ justice. When I catch a peasant's horse or cow in our fields, I lock it up
+ and make the owner pay a ransom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is it not rather dangerous," I inquired, "to take the law thus into your
+ own hands? I have heard that the Russian justices are extremely severe
+ against any one who has recourse to what our German jurists call
+ Selbsthulfe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That they are! So long as you are in Russia, you had much better let
+ yourself be quietly robbed than use any violence against the robber. It is
+ less trouble, and it is cheaper in the long run. If you do not, you may
+ unexpectedly find yourself some fine morning in prison! You must know that
+ many of the young justices belong to the new school of morals."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is that? I have not heard of any new discoveries lately in the
+ sphere of speculative ethics."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, to tell you the truth, I am not one of the initiated, and I can
+ only tell you what I hear. So far as I have noticed, the representatives
+ of the new doctrine talk chiefly about Gumannost' and Tchelovetcheskoe
+ dostoinstvo. You know what these words mean?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Humanity, or rather humanitarianism and human dignity," I replied, not
+ sorry to give a proof that I was advancing in my studies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There, again, you allow your dictionary and your priest to mislead you.
+ These terms, when used by a Russian, cover much more than we understand by
+ them, and those who use them most frequently have generally a special
+ tenderness for all kinds of malefactors. In the old times, malefactors
+ were popularly believed to be bad, dangerous people; but it has been
+ lately discovered that this is a delusion. A young proprietor who lives
+ not far off assures me that they are the true Protestants, and the most
+ powerful social reformers! They protest practically against those
+ imperfections of social organisation of which they are the involuntary
+ victims. The feeble, characterless man quietly submits to his chains; the
+ bold, generous, strong man breaks his fetters, and helps others to do the
+ same. A very ingenious defence of all kinds of rascality, isn't it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, it is a theory that might certainly be carried too far, and might
+ easily lead to very inconvenient conclusions; but I am not sure that,
+ theoretically speaking, it does not contain a certain element of truth. It
+ ought at least to foster that charity which we are enjoined to practise
+ towards all men. But perhaps 'all men' does not include publicans and
+ sinners?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On hearing these words Karl Karl'itch turned to me, and every feature of
+ his honest German face expressed the most undisguised astonishment. "Are
+ you, too, a Nihilist?" he inquired, as soon as he had partially recovered
+ his breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I really don't know what a Nihilist is, but I may assure you that I am
+ not an 'ist' of any kind. What is a Nihilist?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you live long in Russia you'll learn that without my telling you. As I
+ was saying, I am not at all afraid of the peasants citing me before the
+ justice. They know better now. If they gave me too much trouble I could
+ starve their cattle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, when you catch them in your fields," I remarked, taking no notice of
+ the abrupt turn which he had given to the conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can do it without that. You must know that, by the Emancipation Law,
+ the peasants received arable land, but they received little or no
+ pasturage. I have the whip hand of them there!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remarks of Karl Karl'itch on men and things were to me always
+ interesting, for he was a shrewd observer, and displayed occasionally a
+ pleasant, dry humour. But I very soon discovered that his opinions were
+ not to be accepted without reserve. His strong, inflexible Teutonic nature
+ often prevented him from judging impartially. He had no sympathy with the
+ men and the institutions around him, and consequently he was unable to see
+ things from the inside. The specks and blemishes on the surface he
+ perceived clearly enough, but he had no knowledge of the secret,
+ deep-rooted causes by which these specks and blemishes were produced. The
+ simple fact that a man was a Russian satisfactorily accounted, in his
+ opinion, for any kind of moral deformity; and his knowledge turned out to
+ be by no means so extensive as I had at first supposed. Though he had been
+ many years in the country, he knew very little about the life of the
+ peasants beyond that small part of it which concerned directly his own
+ interests and those of his employer. Of the communal organisation,
+ domestic life, religious beliefs, ceremonial practices, and nomadic habits
+ of his humble neighbours, he knew little, and the little he happened to
+ know was far from accurate. In order to gain a knowledge of these matters
+ it would be better, I perceived, to consult the priest, or, better still,
+ the peasants themselves. But to do this it would be necessary to
+ understand easily and speak fluently the colloquial language, and I was
+ still very far from having, acquired the requisite proficiency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even for one who possesses a natural facility for acquiring foreign
+ tongues, the learning of Russian is by no means an easy task. Though it is
+ essentially an Aryan language like our own, and contains only a slight
+ intermixture of Tartar words,&mdash;such as bashlyk (a hood), kalpak (a
+ night-cap), arbuz (a water-melon), etc.&mdash;it has certain sounds
+ unknown to West-European ears, and difficult for West-European tongues,
+ and its roots, though in great part derived from the same original stock
+ as those of the Graeco-Latin and Teutonic languages, are generally not at
+ all easily recognised. As an illustration of this, take the Russian word
+ otets. Strange as it may at first sight appear, this word is merely
+ another form of our word father, of the German vater, and of the French
+ pere. The syllable ets is the ordinary Russian termination denoting the
+ agent, corresponding to the English and German ending er, as we see in
+ such words as&mdash;kup-ets (a buyer), plov-ets (a swimmer), and many
+ others. The root ot is a mutilated form of vot, as we see in the word
+ otchina (a paternal inheritance), which is frequently written votchina.
+ Now vot is evidently the same root as the German vat in Vater, and the
+ English fath in father. Quod erat demonstrandum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this is simple enough, and goes to prove the fundamental identity, or
+ rather the community of origin, of the Slav and Teutonic languages; but it
+ will be readily understood that etymological analogies so carefully
+ disguised are of little practical use in helping us to acquire a foreign
+ tongue. Besides this, the grammatical forms and constructions in Russian
+ are very peculiar, and present a great many strange irregularities. As an
+ illustration of this we may take the future tense. The Russian verb has
+ commonly a simple and a frequentative future. The latter is always
+ regularly formed by means of an auxiliary with the infinitive, as in
+ English, but the former is constructed in a variety of ways, for which no
+ rule can be given, so that the simple future of each individual verb must
+ be learned by a pure effort of memory. In many verbs it is formed by
+ prefixing a preposition, but it is impossible to determine by rule which
+ preposition should be used. Thus idu (I go) becomes poidu; pishu (I write)
+ becomes napishu; pyu (I drink) becomes vuipyu, and so on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Closely akin to the difficulties of pronunciation is the difficulty of
+ accentuating the proper syllable. In this respect Russian is like Greek;
+ you can rarely tell a priori on what syllable the accent falls. But it is
+ more puzzling than Greek, for two reasons: firstly, it is not customary to
+ print Russian with accents; and secondly, no one has yet been able to lay
+ down precise rules for the transposition of the accent in the various
+ inflections of the same word, Of this latter peculiarity, let one
+ illustration suffice. The word ruka (hand) has the accent on the last
+ syllable, but in the accusative (ruku) the accent goes back to the first
+ syllable. It must not, however, be assumed that in all words of this type
+ a similar transposition takes place. The word beda (misfortune), for
+ instance, as well as very many others, always retains the accent on the
+ last syllable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These and many similar difficulties, which need not be here enumerated,
+ can be mastered only by long practice. Serious as they are, they need not
+ frighten any one who is in the habit of learning foreign tongues. The ear
+ and the tongue gradually become familiar with the peculiarities of
+ inflection and accentuation, and practice fulfils the same function as
+ abstract rules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is commonly supposed that Russians have been endowed by Nature with a
+ peculiar linguistic talent. Their own language, it is said, is so
+ difficult that they have no difficulty in acquiring others. This common
+ belief requires, as it seems to me, some explanation. That highly educated
+ Russians are better linguists than the educated classes of Western Europe
+ there can be no possible doubt, for they almost always speak French, and
+ often English and German also. The question, however, is whether this is
+ the result of a psychological peculiarity, or of other causes. Now,
+ without venturing to deny the existence of a natural faculty, I should say
+ that the other causes have at least exercised a powerful influence. Any
+ Russian who wishes to be regarded as civilised must possess at least one
+ foreign language; and, as a consequence of this, the children of the upper
+ classes are always taught at least French in their infancy. Many
+ households comprise a German nurse, a French tutor, and an English
+ governess; and the children thus become accustomed from their earliest
+ years to the use of these three languages. Besides this, Russian is
+ phonetically very rich and contains nearly all the sounds which are to be
+ found in West-European tongues. Perhaps on the whole it would be well to
+ apply here the Darwinian theory, and suppose that the Russian Noblesse,
+ having been obliged for several generations to acquire foreign languages,
+ have gradually developed a hereditary polyglot talent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several circumstances concurred to assist me in my efforts, during my
+ voluntary exile, to acquire at least such a knowledge of the language as
+ would enable me to converse freely with the peasantry. In the first place,
+ my reverend teacher was an agreeable, kindly, talkative man, who took a
+ great delight in telling interminable stories, quite independently of any
+ satisfaction which he might derive from the consciousness of their being
+ understood and appreciated. Even when walking alone he was always
+ muttering something to an imaginary listener. A stranger meeting him on
+ such occasions might have supposed that he was holding converse with
+ unseen spirits, though his broad muscular form and rubicund face militated
+ strongly against such a supposition; but no man, woman, or child living
+ within a radius of ten miles would ever have fallen into this mistake.
+ Every one in the neighbourhood knew that "Batushka" (papa), as he was
+ familiarly called, was too prosaical, practical a man to see things
+ ethereal, that he was an irrepressible talker, and that when he could not
+ conveniently find an audience he created one by his own imagination. This
+ peculiarity of his rendered me good service. Though for some time I
+ understood very little of what he said, and very often misplaced the
+ positive and negative monosyllables which I hazarded occasionally by way
+ of encouragement, he talked vigorously all the same. Like all garrulous
+ people, he was constantly repeating himself; but to this I did not object,
+ for the custom&mdash;however disagreeable in ordinary society&mdash;was
+ for me highly beneficial, and when I had already heard a story once or
+ twice before, it was much easier for me to assume at the proper moment the
+ requisite expression of countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another fortunate circumstance was that at Ivanofka there were no
+ distractions, so that the whole of the day and a great part of the night
+ could be devoted to study. My chief amusement was an occasional walk in
+ the fields with Karl Karl'itch; and even this mild form of dissipation
+ could not always be obtained, for as soon as rain had fallen it was
+ difficult to go beyond the verandah&mdash;the mud precluding the
+ possibility of a constitutional. The nearest approach to excitement was
+ mushroom-gathering; and in this occupation my inability to distinguish the
+ edible from the poisonous species made my efforts unacceptable. We lived
+ so "far from the madding crowd" that its din scarcely reached our ears. A
+ week or ten days might pass without our receiving any intelligence from
+ the outer world. The nearest post-office was in the district town, and
+ with that distant point we had no regular system of communication. Letters
+ and newspapers remained there till called for, and were brought to us
+ intermittently when some one of our neighbours happened to pass that way.
+ Current history was thus administered to us in big doses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One very big dose I remember well. For a much longer time than usual no
+ volunteer letter-carrier had appeared, and the delay was more than usually
+ tantalising, because it was known that war had broken out between France
+ and Germany. At last a big bundle of a daily paper called the Golos was
+ brought to me. Impatient to learn whether any great battle had been
+ fought, I began by examining the latest number, and stumbled at once on an
+ article headed, "Latest Intelligence: the Emperor at Wilhelmshohe!!!" The
+ large type in which the heading was printed and the three marks of
+ exclamation showed plainly that the article was very important. I began to
+ read with avidity, but was utterly mystified. What emperor was this?
+ Probably the Tsar or the Emperor of Austria, for there was no German
+ Emperor in those days. But no! It was evidently the Emperor of the French.
+ And how did Napoleon get to Wilhelmshohe? The French must have broken
+ through the Rhine defences, and pushed far into Germany. But no! As I read
+ further, I found this theory equally untenable. It turned out that the
+ Emperor was surrounded by Germans, and&mdash;a prisoner! In order to solve
+ the mystery, I had to go back to the preceding numbers of the paper, and
+ learned, at a sitting, all about the successive German victories, the
+ defeat and capitulation of Macmahon's army at Sedan, and the other great
+ events of that momentous time. The impression produced can scarcely be
+ realised by those who have always imbibed current history in the
+ homeopathic doses administered by the morning and evening daily papers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the useful loquacity of my teacher and the possibility of devoting all
+ my time to my linguistic studies, I made such rapid progress in the
+ acquisition of the language that I was able after a few weeks to
+ understand much of what was said to me, and to express myself in a vague,
+ roundabout way. In the latter operation I was much assisted by a peculiar
+ faculty of divination which the Russians possess in a high degree. If a
+ foreigner succeeds in expressing about one-fourth of an idea, the Russian
+ peasant can generally fill up the remaining three-fourths from his own
+ intuition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As my powers of comprehension increased, my long conversations with the
+ priest became more and more instructive. At first his remarks and stories
+ had for me simply a philological interest, but gradually I perceived that
+ his talk contained a great deal of solid, curious information regarding
+ himself and the class to which he belonged&mdash;information of a kind not
+ commonly found in grammatical exercises. Some of this I now propose to
+ communicate to the reader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE VILLAGE PRIEST
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Priests' Names&mdash;Clerical Marriages&mdash;The White and the Black
+ Clergy&mdash;Why the People do not Respect the Parish Priests&mdash;History
+ of the White Clergy&mdash;The Parish Priest and the Protestant Pastor&mdash;In
+ What Sense the Russian People are Religious&mdash;Icons&mdash;The Clergy
+ and Popular Education&mdash;Ecclesiastical Reform&mdash;Premonitory
+ Symptoms of Change&mdash;Two Typical Specimens of the Parochial Clergy of
+ the Present Day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In formal introductions it is customary to pronounce in a more or less
+ inaudible voice the names of the two persons introduced. Circumstances
+ compel me in the present case to depart from received custom. The truth
+ is, I do not know the names of the two people whom I wish to bring
+ together! The reader who knows his own name will readily pardon one-half
+ of my ignorance, but he may naturally expect that I should know the name
+ of a man with whom I profess to be acquainted, and with whom I daily held
+ long conversations during a period of several months. Strange as it may
+ seem, I do not. During all the time of my sojourn in Ivanofka I never
+ heard him addressed or spoken of otherwise than as "Batushka." Now
+ "Batushka" is not a name at all. It is simply the diminutive form of an
+ obsolete word meaning "father," and is usually applied to all village
+ priests. The ushka is a common diminutive termination, and the root Bat is
+ evidently the same as that which appears in the Latin pater.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though I do not happen to know what Batushka's family name was, I can
+ communicate two curious facts concerning it: he had not possessed it in
+ his childhood, and it was not the same as his father's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader whose intuitive powers have been preternaturally sharpened by a
+ long course of sensation novels will probably leap to the conclusion that
+ Batushka was a mysterious individual, very different from what he seemed&mdash;either
+ the illegitimate son of some great personage, or a man of high birth who
+ had committed some great sin, and who now sought oblivion and expiation in
+ the humble duties of a parish priest. Let me dispel at once all delusions
+ of this kind. Batushka was actually as well as legally the legitimate son
+ of an ordinary parish priest, who was still living, about twenty miles
+ off, and for many generations all his paternal and maternal ancestors,
+ male and female, had belonged to the priestly caste. He was thus a Levite
+ of the purest water, and thoroughly Levitical in his character. Though he
+ knew by experience something about the weakness of the flesh, he had never
+ committed any sins of the heroic kind, and had no reason to conceal his
+ origin. The curious facts above stated were simply the result of a
+ peculiar custom which exists among the Russian clergy. According to this
+ custom, when a boy enters the seminary he receives from the Bishop a new
+ family name. The name may be Bogoslafski, from a word signifying
+ "Theology," or Bogolubof, "the love of God," or some similar term; or it
+ may be derived from the name of the boy's native village, or from any
+ other word which the Bishop thinks fit to choose. I know of one instance
+ where a Bishop chose two French words for the purpose. He had intended to
+ call the boy Velikoselski, after his native place, Velikoe Selo, which
+ means "big village"; but finding that there was already a Velikoselski in
+ the seminary, and being in a facetious frame of mind, he called the new
+ comer Grandvillageski&mdash;a word that may perhaps sorely puzzle some
+ philologist of the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My reverend teacher was a tall, muscular man of about forty years of age,
+ with a full dark-brown beard, and long lank hair falling over his
+ shoulders. The visible parts of his dress consisted of three articles&mdash;a
+ dingy-brown robe of coarse material buttoned closely at the neck and
+ descending to the ground, a wideawake hat, and a pair of large, heavy
+ boots. As to the esoteric parts of his attire, I refrained from making
+ investigations. His life had been an uneventful one. At an early age he
+ had been sent to the seminary in the chief town of the province, and had
+ made for himself the reputation of a good average scholar. "The seminary
+ of that time," he used to say to me, referring to that part of his life,
+ "was not what it is now. Nowadays the teachers talk about humanitarianism,
+ and the boys would think that a crime had been committed against human
+ dignity if one of them happened to be flogged. But they don't consider
+ that human dignity is at all affected by their getting drunk, and going to&mdash;to&mdash;to
+ places that I never went to. I was flogged often enough, and I don't think
+ that I am a worse man on that account; and though I never heard then
+ anything about pedagogical science that they talk so much about now, I'll
+ read a bit of Latin yet with the best of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When my studies were finished," said Batushka, continuing the simple
+ story of his life, "the Bishop found a wife for me, and I succeeded her
+ father, who was then an old man. In that way I became a priest of
+ Ivanofka, and have remained here ever since. It is a hard life, for the
+ parish is big, and my bit of land is not very fertile; but, praise be to
+ God! I am healthy and strong, and get on well enough."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You said that the Bishop found a wife for you," I remarked. "I suppose,
+ therefore, that he was a great friend of yours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at all. The Bishop does the same for all the seminarists who wish to
+ be ordained: it is an important part of his pastoral duties."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed!" I exclaimed in astonishment. "Surely that is carrying the system
+ of paternal government a little too far. Why should his Reverence meddle
+ with things that don't concern him?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But these matters do concern him. He is the natural protector of widows
+ and orphans, especially among the clergy of his own diocese. When a parish
+ priest dies, what is to become of his wife and daughters?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not perceiving clearly the exact bearing of these last remarks, I ventured
+ to suggest that priests ought to economise in view of future
+ contingencies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is easy to speak," replied Batushka: "'A story is soon told,' as the
+ old proverb has it, 'but a thing is not soon done.' How are we to
+ economise? Even without saving we have the greatest difficulty to make the
+ two ends meet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then the widow and daughters might work and gain a livelihood."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What, pray, could they work at?" asked Batushka, and paused for a reply.
+ Seeing that I had none to offer him, he continued, "Even the house and
+ land belong not to them, but to the new priest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If that position occurred in a novel," I said, "I could foretell what
+ would happen. The author would make the new priest fall in love with and
+ marry one of the daughters, and then the whole family, including the
+ mother-in-law, would live happily ever afterwards."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is exactly how the Bishop arranges the matter. What the novelist
+ does with the puppets of his imagination, the Bishop does with real beings
+ of flesh and blood. As a rational being he cannot leave things to chance.
+ Besides this, he must arrange the matter before the young man takes
+ orders, because, by the rules of the Church, the marriage cannot take
+ place after the ceremony of ordination. When the affair is arranged before
+ the charge becomes vacant, the old priest can die with the pleasant
+ consciousness that his family is provided for."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Batushka, you certainly put the matter in a very plausible way, but
+ there seem to be two flaws in the analogy. The novelist can make two
+ people fall in love with each other, and make them live happily together
+ with the mother-in-law, but that&mdash;with all due respect to his
+ Reverence, be it said&mdash;is beyond the power of a Bishop."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am not sure," said Batushka, avoiding the point of the objection, "that
+ love-marriages are always the happiest ones; and as to the mother-in-law,
+ there are&mdash;or at least there were until the emancipation of the serfs&mdash;a
+ mother-in-law and several daughters-in-law in almost every peasant
+ household."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And does harmony generally reign in peasant households?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That depends upon the head of the house. If he is a man of the right
+ sort, he can keep the women-folks in order." This remark was made in an
+ energetic tone, with the evident intention of assuring me that the speaker
+ was himself "a man of the right sort"; but I did not attribute much
+ importance to it, for I have occasionally heard henpecked husbands talk in
+ this grandiloquent way when their wives were out of hearing. Altogether I
+ was by no means convinced that the system of providing for the widows and
+ orphans of the clergy by means of mariages de convenance was a good one,
+ but I determined to suspend my judgment until I should obtain fuller
+ information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An additional bit of evidence came to me a week or two later. One morning,
+ on going into the priest's house, I found that he had a friend with him&mdash;the
+ priest of a village some fifteen miles off. Before we had got through the
+ ordinary conventional remarks about the weather and the crops, a peasant
+ drove up to the door in his cart with a message that an old peasant was
+ dying in a neighbouring village, and desired the last consolations of
+ religion. Batushka was thus obliged to leave us, and his friend and I
+ agreed to stroll leisurely in the direction of the village to which he was
+ going, so as to meet him on his way home. The harvest was already
+ finished, so that our road, after emerging from the village, lay through
+ stubble-fields. Beyond this we entered the pine forest, and by the time we
+ had reached this point I had succeeded in leading the conversation to the
+ subject of clerical marriages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have been thinking a good deal on this subject," I said, "and I should
+ very much like to know your opinion about the system."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My new acquaintance was a tall, lean, black-haired man, with a sallow
+ complexion and vinegar aspect&mdash;evidently one of those unhappy mortals
+ who are intended by Nature to take a pessimistic view of all things, and
+ to point out to their fellows the deep shadows of human life. I was not at
+ all surprised, therefore, when he replied in a deep, decided tone, "Bad,
+ very bad&mdash;utterly bad!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The way in which these words were pronounced left no doubt as to the
+ opinion of the speaker, but I was desirous of knowing on what that opinion
+ was founded&mdash;more especially as I seemed to detect in the tone a note
+ of personal grievance. My answer was shaped accordingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I suspected that; but in the discussions which I have had I have always
+ been placed at a disadvantage, not being able to adduce any definite facts
+ in support of my opinion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You may congratulate yourself on being unable to find any in your own
+ experience. A mother-in-law living in the house does not conduce to
+ domestic harmony. I don't know how it is in your country, but so it is
+ with us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I hastened to assure him that this was not a peculiarity of Russia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know it only too well," he continued. "My mother-in-law lived with me
+ for some years, and I was obliged at last to insist on her going to
+ another son-in-law."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rather selfish conduct towards your brother-in-law," I said to myself,
+ and then added audibly, "I hope you have thus solved the difficulty
+ satisfactorily."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at all. Things are worse now than they were. I agreed to pay her
+ three roubles a month, and have regularly fulfilled my promise, but lately
+ she has thought it not enough, and she made a complaint to the Bishop.
+ Last week I went to him to defend myself, but as I had not money enough
+ for all the officials in the Consistorium, I could not obtain justice. My
+ mother-in-law had made all sorts of absurd accusations against me, and
+ consequently I was laid under an inhibition for six weeks!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what is the effect of an inhibition?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The effect is that I cannot perform the ordinary rites of our religion.
+ It is really very unjust," he added, assuming an indignant tone, "and very
+ annoying. Think of all the hardship and inconvenience to which it gives
+ rise."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I thought of the hardship and inconvenience to which the parishioners
+ must be exposed through the inconsiderate conduct of the old
+ mother-in-law, I could not but sympathise with my new acquaintance's
+ indignation. My sympathy was, however, somewhat cooled when I perceived
+ that I was on a wrong tack, and that the priest was looking at the matter
+ from an entirely different point of view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You see," he said, "it is a most unfortunate time of year. The peasants
+ have gathered in their harvest, and can give of their abundance. There are
+ merry-makings and marriages, besides the ordinary deaths and baptisms.
+ Altogether I shall lose by the thing more than a hundred roubles!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I confess I was a little shocked on hearing the priest thus speak of his
+ sacred functions as if they were an ordinary marketable commodity, and
+ talk of the inhibition as a pushing undertaker might talk of sanitary
+ improvements. My surprise was caused not by the fact that he regarded the
+ matter from a pecuniary point of view&mdash;for I was old enough to know
+ that clerical human nature is not altogether insensible to pecuniary
+ considerations&mdash;but by the fact that he should thus undisguisedly
+ express his opinions to a stranger without in the least suspecting that
+ there was anything unseemly in his way of speaking. The incident appeared
+ to me very characteristic, but I refrained from all audible comments, lest
+ I should inadvertently check his communicativeness. With the view of
+ encouraging it, I professed to be very much interested, as I really was,
+ in what he said, and I asked him how in his opinion the present
+ unsatisfactory state of things might be remedied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is but one cure," he said, with a readiness that showed he had
+ often spoken on the theme already, "and that is freedom and publicity. We
+ full-grown men are treated like children, and watched like conspirators.
+ If I wish to preach a sermon&mdash;not that I often wish to do such a
+ thing, but there are occasions when it is advisable&mdash;I am expected to
+ show it first to the Blagotchinny, and&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I beg your pardon, who is the Blagotchinny?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Blagotchinny is a parish priest who is in direct relations with the
+ Consistory of the Province, and who is supposed to exercise a strict
+ supervision over all the other parish priests of his district. He acts as
+ the spy of the Consistory, which is filled with greedy, shameless
+ officials, deaf to any one who does not come provided with a handful of
+ roubles. The Bishop may be a good, well-intentioned man, but he always
+ sees and acts through these worthless subordinates. Besides this, the
+ Bishops and heads of monasteries, who monopolise the higher places in the
+ ecclesiastical Administration, all belong to the Black Clergy&mdash;that
+ is to say, they are all monks&mdash;and consequently cannot understand our
+ wants. How can they, on whom celibacy is imposed by the rules of the
+ Church, understand the position of a parish priest who has to bring up a
+ family and to struggle with domestic cares of every kind? What they do is
+ to take all the comfortable places for themselves, and leave us all the
+ hard work. The monasteries are rich enough, and you see how poor we are.
+ Perhaps you have heard that the parish priests extort money from the
+ peasants&mdash;refusing to perform the rites of baptism or burial until a
+ considerable sum has been paid. It is only too true, but who is to blame?
+ The priest must live and bring up his family, and you cannot imagine the
+ humiliations to which he has to submit in order to gain a scanty pittance.
+ I know it by experience. When I make the periodical visitation I can see
+ that the peasants grudge every handful of rye and every egg that they give
+ me. I can overbear their sneers as I go away, and I know they have many
+ sayings such as&mdash;'The priest takes from the living and from the
+ dead.' Many of them fasten their doors, pretending to be away from home,
+ and do not even take the precaution of keeping silent till I am out of
+ hearing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You surprise me," I said, in reply to the last part of this long tirade;
+ "I have always heard that the Russians are a very religious people&mdash;at
+ least the lower classes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So they are; but the peasantry are poor and heavily taxed. They set great
+ importance on the sacraments, and observe rigorously the fasts, which
+ comprise nearly a half of the year; but they show very little respect for
+ their priests, who are almost as poor as themselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But I do not see clearly how you propose to remedy this state of things."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By freedom and publicity, as I said before." The worthy man seemed to
+ have learned this formula by rote. "First of all, our wants must be made
+ known. In some provinces there have been attempts to do this by means of
+ provincial assemblies of the clergy, but these efforts have always been
+ strenuously opposed by the Consistories, whose members fear publicity
+ above all things. But in order to have publicity we must have more
+ freedom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here followed a long discourse on freedom and publicity, which seemed to
+ me very confused. So far as I could understand the argument, there was a
+ good deal of reasoning in a circle. Freedom was necessary in order to get
+ publicity, and publicity was necessary in order to get freedom; and the
+ practical result would be that the clergy would enjoy bigger salaries and
+ more popular respect. We had only got thus far in the investigation of the
+ subject when our conversation was interrupted by the rumbling of a
+ peasant's cart. In a few seconds our friend Batushka appeared, and the
+ conversation took a different turn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since that time I have frequently spoken on this subject with competent
+ authorities, and nearly all have admitted that the present condition of
+ the clergy is highly unsatisfactory, and that the parish priest rarely
+ enjoys the respect of his parishioners. In a semi-official report, which I
+ once accidentally stumbled upon when searching for material of a different
+ kind, the facts are stated in the following plain language: "The people"&mdash;I
+ seek to translate as literally as possible&mdash;"do not respect the
+ clergy, but persecute them with derision and reproaches, and feel them to
+ be a burden. In nearly all the popular comic stories the priest, his wife,
+ or his labourer is held up to ridicule, and in all the proverbs and
+ popular sayings where the clergy are mentioned it is always with derision.
+ The people shun the clergy, and have recourse to them not from the inner
+ impulse of conscience, but from necessity. . . . And why do the people not
+ respect the clergy? Because it forms a class apart; because, having
+ received a false kind of education, it does not introduce into the life of
+ the people the teaching of the Spirit, but remains in the mere dead forms
+ of outward ceremonial, at the same time despising these forms even to
+ blasphemy; because the clergy itself continually presents examples of want
+ of respect to religion, and transforms the service of God into a
+ profitable trade. Can the people respect the clergy when they hear how one
+ priest stole money from below the pillow of a dying man at the moment of
+ confession, how another was publicly dragged out of a house of ill-fame,
+ how a third christened a dog, how a fourth whilst officiating at the
+ Easter service was dragged by the hair from the altar by the deacon? Is it
+ possible for the people to respect priests who spend their time in the
+ gin-shop, write fraudulent petitions, fight with the cross in their hands,
+ and abuse each other in bad language at the altar?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One might fill several pages with examples of this kind&mdash;in each
+ instance naming the time and place&mdash;without overstepping the
+ boundaries of the province of Nizhni-Novgorod. Is it possible for the
+ people to respect the clergy when they see everywhere amongst them simony,
+ carelessness in performing the religious rites, and disorder in
+ administering the sacraments? Is it possible for the people to respect the
+ clergy when they see that truth has disappeared from it, and that the
+ Consistories, guided in their decisions not by rules, but by personal
+ friendship and bribery, destroy in it the last remains of truthfulness? If
+ we add to all this the false certificates which the clergy give to those
+ who do not wish to partake of the Eucharist, the dues illegally extracted
+ from the Old Ritualists, the conversion of the altar into a source of
+ revenue, the giving of churches to priests' daughters as a dowry, and
+ similar phenomena, the question as to whether the people can respect the
+ clergy requires no answer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As these words were written by an orthodox Russian,* celebrated for his
+ extensive and intimate knowledge of Russian provincial life, and were
+ addressed in all seriousness to a member of the Imperial family, we may
+ safely assume that they contain a considerable amount of truth. The reader
+ must not, however, imagine that all Russian priests are of the kind above
+ referred to. Many of them are honest, respectable, well-intentioned men,
+ who conscientiously fulfil their humble duties, and strive hard to procure
+ a good education for their children. If they have less learning, culture,
+ and refinement than the Roman Catholic priesthood, they have at the same
+ time infinitely less fanaticism, less spiritual pride, and less
+ intolerance towards the adherents of other faiths.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Mr. Melnikof, in a "secret" Report to the Grand Duke
+ Constantine Nikolaievitch.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Both the good and the bad qualities of the Russian priesthood at the
+ present time can be easily explained by its past history, and by certain
+ peculiarities of the national character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russian White Clergy&mdash;that is to say, the parish priests, as
+ distinguished from the monks, who are called the Black Clergy&mdash;have
+ had a curious history. In primitive times they were drawn from all classes
+ of the population, and freely elected by the parishioners. When a man was
+ elected by the popular vote, he was presented to the Bishop, and if he was
+ found to be a fit and proper person for the office, he was at once
+ ordained. But this custom early fell into disuse. The Bishops, finding
+ that many of the candidates presented were illiterate peasants, gradually
+ assumed the right of appointing the priests, with or without the consent
+ of the parishioners; and their choice generally fell on the sons of the
+ clergy as the men best fitted to take orders. The creation of Bishops'
+ schools, afterwards called seminaries, in which the sons of the clergy
+ were educated, naturally led, in the course of time, to the total
+ exclusion of the other classes. The policy of the civil Government led to
+ the same end. Peter the Great laid down the principle that every subject
+ should in some way serve the State&mdash;the nobles as officers in the
+ army or navy, or as officials in the civil service; the clergy as
+ ministers of religion; and the lower classes as soldiers, sailors, or
+ tax-payers. Of these three classes the clergy had by far the lightest
+ burdens, and consequently many nobles and peasants would willingly have
+ entered its ranks. But this species of desertion the Government could not
+ tolerate, and accordingly the priesthood was surrounded by a legal barrier
+ which prevented all outsiders from entering it. Thus by the combined
+ efforts of the ecclesiastical and the civil Administration the clergy
+ became a separate class or caste, legally and actually incapable of
+ mingling with the other classes of the population.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The simple fact that the clergy became an exclusive caste, with a peculiar
+ character, peculiar habits, and peculiar ideals, would in itself have had
+ a prejudicial influence on the priesthood; but this was not all. The caste
+ increased in numbers by the process of natural reproduction much more
+ rapidly than the offices to be filled, so that the supply of priests and
+ deacons soon far exceeded the demand; and the disproportion between supply
+ and demand became every year greater and greater. In this way was formed
+ an ever-increasing clerical Proletariat, which&mdash;as is always the case
+ with a Proletariat of any kind&mdash;gravitated towards the towns. In vain
+ the Government issued ukazes prohibiting the priests from quitting their
+ places of domicile, and treated as vagrants and runaways those who
+ disregarded the prohibition; in vain successive sovereigns endeavoured to
+ diminish the number of these supernumeraries by drafting them wholesale
+ into the army. In Moscow, St. Petersburg, and all the larger towns the cry
+ was, "Still they come!" Every morning, in the Kremlin of Moscow, a large
+ crowd of them assembled for the purpose of being hired to officiate in the
+ private chapels of the rich nobles, and a great deal of hard bargaining
+ took place between the priests and the lackeys sent to hire them&mdash;conducted
+ in the same spirit, and in nearly the same forms, as that which
+ simultaneously took place in the bazaar close by between extortionate
+ traders and thrifty housewives. "Listen to me," a priest would say, as an
+ ultimatum, to a lackey who was trying to beat down the price: "if you
+ don't give me seventy-five kopeks without further ado, I'll take a bite of
+ this roll, and that will be an end to it!" And that would have been an end
+ to the bargaining, for, according to the rules of the Church, a priest
+ cannot officiate after breaking his fast. The ultimatum, however, could be
+ used with effect only to country servants who had recently come to town. A
+ sharp lackey, experienced in this kind of diplomacy, would have laughed at
+ the threat, and replied coolly, "Bite away, Batushka; I can find plenty
+ more of your sort!" Amusing scenes of this kind I have heard described by
+ old people who professed to have been eye-witnesses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The condition of the priests who remained in the villages was not much
+ better. Those of them who were fortunate enough to find places were raised
+ at least above the fear of absolute destitution, but their position was by
+ no means enviable. They received little consideration or respect from the
+ peasantry, and still less from the nobles. When the church was situated
+ not on the State Domains, but on a private estate, they were practically
+ under the power of the proprietor&mdash;almost as completely as his serfs;
+ and sometimes that power was exercised in a most humiliating and shameful
+ way. I have heard, for instance, of one priest who was ducked in a pond on
+ a cold winter day for the amusement of the proprietor and his guests&mdash;choice
+ spirits, of rough, jovial temperament; and of another who, having
+ neglected to take off his hat as he passed the proprietor's house, was put
+ into a barrel and rolled down a hill into the river at the bottom!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In citing these incidents, I do not at all mean to imply that they
+ represent the relations which usually existed between proprietors and
+ village priests, for I am quite aware that wanton cruelty was not among
+ the ordinary vices of Russian serf-owners. My object in mentioning the
+ incidents is to show how a brutal proprietor&mdash;and it must be admitted
+ that they were not a few brutal individuals in the class&mdash;could
+ maltreat a priest without much danger of being called to account for his
+ conduct. Of course such conduct was an offence in the eyes of the criminal
+ law; but the criminal law of that time was very shortsighted, and strongly
+ disposed to close its eyes completely when the offender was an influential
+ proprietor. Had the incidents reached the ears of the Emperor Nicholas he
+ would probably have ordered the culprit to be summarily and severely
+ punished but, as the Russian proverb has it, "Heaven is high, and the Tsar
+ is far off." A village priest treated in this barbarous way could have
+ little hope of redress, and, if he were a prudent man, he would make no
+ attempt to obtain it; for any annoyance which he might give the proprietor
+ by complaining to the ecclesiastical authorities would be sure to be paid
+ back to him with interest in some indirect way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sons of the clergy who did not succeed in finding regular sacerdotal
+ employment were in a still worse position. Many of them served as scribes
+ or subordinate officials in the public offices, where they commonly eked
+ out their scanty salaries by unblushing extortion and pilfering. Those who
+ did not succeed in gaining even modest employment of this kind had to keep
+ off starvation by less lawful means, and not unfrequently found their way
+ into the prisons or to Siberia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In judging of the Russian priesthood of the present time, we must call to
+ mind this severe school through which it has passed, and we must also take
+ into consideration the spirit which has been for centuries predominant in
+ the Eastern Church&mdash;I mean the strong tendency both in the clergy and
+ in the laity to attribute an inordinate importance to the ceremonial
+ element of religion. Primitive mankind is everywhere and always disposed
+ to regard religion as simply a mass of mysterious rites which have a
+ secret magical power of averting evil in this world and securing felicity
+ in the next. To this general rule the Russian peasantry are no exception,
+ and the Russian Church has not done all it might have done to eradicate
+ this conception and to bring religion into closer association with
+ ordinary morality. Hence such incidents as the following are still
+ possible: A robber kills and rifles a traveller, but he refrains from
+ eating a piece of cooked meat which he finds in the cart, because it
+ happens to be a fast-day; a peasant prepares to rob a young attache of the
+ Austrian Embassy in St. Petersburg, and ultimately kills his victim, but
+ before going to the house he enters a church and commends his undertaking
+ to the protection of the saints; a housebreaker, when in the act of
+ robbing a church, finds it difficult to extract the jewels from an Icon,
+ and makes a vow that if a certain saint assists him he will place a
+ rouble's-worth of tapers before the saint's image! These facts are within
+ the memory of the present generation. I knew the young attache, and saw
+ him a few days before his death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these are of course extreme cases, but they illustrate a tendency
+ which in its milder forms is only too general amongst the Russian people&mdash;the
+ tendency to regard religion as a mass of ceremonies which have a magical
+ rather than a spiritual significance. The poor woman who kneels at a
+ religious procession in order that the Icon may be carried over her head,
+ and the rich merchant who invites the priests to bring some famous Icon to
+ his house, illustrates this tendency in a more harmless form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to a popular saying, "As is the priest, so is the parish," and
+ the converse proposition is equally true&mdash;as is the parish, so is the
+ priest. The great majority of priests, like the great majority of men in
+ general, content themselves with simply striving to perform what is
+ expected of them, and their character is consequently determined to a
+ certain extent by the ideas and conceptions of their parishioners. This
+ will become more apparent if we contrast the Russian priest with the
+ Protestant pastor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to Protestant conceptions, the village pastor is a man of grave
+ demeanour and exemplary conduct, and possesses a certain amount of
+ education and refinement. He ought to expound weekly to his flock, in
+ simple, impressive words, the great truths of Christianity, and exhort his
+ hearers to walk in the paths of righteousness. Besides this, he is
+ expected to comfort the afflicted, to assist the needy, to counsel those
+ who are harassed with doubts, and to admonish those who openly stray from
+ the narrow path. Such is the ideal in the popular mind, and pastors
+ generally seek to realise it, if not in very deed, at least in appearance.
+ The Russian priest, on the contrary, has no such ideal set before him by
+ his parishioners. He is expected merely to conform to certain observances,
+ and to perform punctiliously the rites and ceremonies prescribed by the
+ Church. If he does this without practising extortion his parishioners are
+ quite satisfied. He rarely preaches or exhorts, and neither has nor seeks
+ to have a moral influence over his flock. I have occasionally heard of
+ Russian priests who approach to what I have termed the Protestant ideal,
+ and I have even seen one or two of them, but I fear they are not numerous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the above contrast I have accidentally omitted one important feature.
+ The Protestant clergy have in all countries rendered valuable service to
+ the cause of popular education. The reason of this is not difficult to
+ find. In order to be a good Protestant it is necessary to "search the
+ Scriptures," and to do this, one must be able at least to read. To be a
+ good member of the Greek Orthodox Church, on the contrary, according to
+ popular conceptions, the reading of the Scriptures is not necessary, and
+ therefore primary education has not in the eyes of the Greek Orthodox
+ priest the same importance which it has in the eyes of the Protestant
+ pastor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be admitted that the Russian people are in a certain sense
+ religions. They go regularly to church on Sundays and holy-days, cross
+ themselves repeatedly when they pass a church or Icon, take the Holy
+ Communion at stated seasons, rigorously abstain from animal food&mdash;not
+ only on Wednesdays and Fridays, but also during Lent and the other long
+ fasts&mdash;make occasional pilgrimages to holy shrines, and, in a word,
+ fulfil punctiliously the ceremonial observances which they suppose
+ necessary for salvation. But here their religiousness ends. They are
+ generally profoundly ignorant of religious doctrine, and know little or
+ nothing of Holy Writ. A peasant, it is said, was once asked by a priest if
+ he could name the three Persons of the Trinity, and replied without a
+ moment's hesitation, "How can one not know that, Batushka? Of course it is
+ the Saviour, the Mother of God, and Saint Nicholas the miracle-worker!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That answer represents fairly enough the theological attainments of a very
+ large section of the peasantry. The anecdote is so often repeated that it
+ is probably an invention, but it is not a calumny of theology and of what
+ Protestants term the "inner religious life" the orthodox Russian peasant&mdash;of
+ Dissenters, to whom these remarks do not apply, I shall speak later&mdash;has
+ no conception. For him the ceremonial part of religion suffices, and he
+ has the most unbounded, childlike confidence in the saving efficacy of the
+ rites which he practises. If he has been baptised in infancy, has
+ regularly observed the fasts, has annually partaken of the Holy Communion,
+ and has just confessed and received extreme unction, he feels death
+ approach with the most perfect tranquillity. He is tormented with no
+ doubts as to the efficacy of faith or works, and has no fears that his
+ past life may possibly have rendered him unfit for eternal felicity. Like
+ a man in a sinking ship who has buckled on his life-preserver, he feels
+ perfectly secure. With no fear for the future and little regret for the
+ present or the past, he awaits calmly the dread summons, and dies with a
+ resignation which a Stoic philosopher might envy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the above paragraph I have used the word Icon, and perhaps the reader
+ may not clearly understand the word. Let me explain then, briefly, what an
+ Icon is&mdash;a very necessary explanation, for the Icons play an
+ important part in the religious observances of the Russian people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Icons are pictorial, usually half-length, representations of the Saviour,
+ of the Madonna, or of a saint, executed in archaic Byzantine style, on a
+ yellow or gold ground, and varying in size from a square inch to several
+ square feet. Very often the whole picture, with the exception of the face
+ and hands of the figure, is covered with a metal plaque, embossed so as to
+ represent the form of the figure and the drapery. When this plaque is not
+ used, the crown and costume are often adorned with pearls and other
+ precious stones&mdash;sometimes of great price.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In respect of religions significance, Icons are of two kinds: simple, and
+ miraculous or miracle-working (tchudotvorny). The former are manufactured
+ in enormous quantities&mdash;chiefly in the province of Vladimir, where
+ whole villages are employed in this kind of work&mdash;and are to be found
+ in every Russian house, from the hut of the peasant to the palace of the
+ Emperor. They are generally placed high up in a corner facing the door,
+ and good orthodox Christians on entering bow in that direction, making at
+ the same time the sign of the cross. Before and after meals the same short
+ ceremony is always performed. On the eve of fete-days a small lamp is kept
+ burning before at least one of the Icons in the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wonder-working Icons are comparatively few in number, and are always
+ carefully preserved in a church or chapel. They are commonly believed to
+ have been "not made with hands," and to have appeared in a miraculous way.
+ A monk, or it may be a common mortal, has a vision, in which he is
+ informed that he may find a miraculous Icon in such a place, and on going
+ to the spot indicated he finds it, sometimes buried, sometimes hanging on
+ a tree. The sacred treasure is then removed to a church, and the news
+ spreads like wildfire through the district. Thousands flock to prostrate
+ themselves before the heaven-sent picture, and some are healed of their
+ diseases&mdash;a fact that plainly indicates its miracle-working power.
+ The whole affair is then officially reported to the Most Holy Synod, the
+ highest ecclesiastical authority in Russia, in order that the existence of
+ the miracle-working power may be fully and regularly proved. The official
+ recognition of the fact is by no means a mere matter of form, for the
+ Synod is well aware that wonder-working Icons are always a rich source of
+ revenue to the monasteries where they are kept, and that zealous Superiors
+ are consequently apt in such cases to lean to the side of credulity,
+ rather than that of over-severe criticism. A regular investigation is
+ therefore made, and the formal recognition is not granted till the
+ testimony of the finder is thoroughly examined and the alleged miracles
+ duly authenticated. If the recognition is granted, the Icon is treated
+ with the greatest veneration, and is sure to be visited by pilgrims from
+ far and near.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the most revered Icons&mdash;as, for instance, the Kazan Madonna&mdash;have
+ annual fete-days instituted in their honour; or, more correctly speaking,
+ the anniversary of their miraculous appearance is observed as a religions
+ holiday. A few of them have an additional title to popular respect and
+ veneration: that of being intimately associated with great events in the
+ national history. The Vladimir Madonna, for example, once saved Moscow
+ from the Tartars; the Smolensk Madonna accompanied the army in the
+ glorious campaign against Napoleon in 1812; and when in that year it was
+ known in Moscow that the French were advancing on the city, the people
+ wished the Metropolitan to take the Iberian Madonna, which may still be
+ seen near one of the gates of the Kremlin, and to lead them out armed with
+ hatchets against the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Russian priests have done little to advance popular education, they
+ have at least never intentionally opposed it. Unlike their Roman Catholic
+ brethren, they do not hold that "a little learning is a dangerous thing,"
+ and do not fear that faith may be endangered by knowledge. Indeed, it is a
+ remarkable fact that the Russian Church regards with profound apathy those
+ various intellectual movements which cause serious alarm to many
+ thoughtful Christians in Western Europe. It considers religion as
+ something so entirely apart that its votaries do not feel the necessity of
+ bringing their theological beliefs into logical harmony with their
+ scientific conceptions. A man may remain a good orthodox Christian long
+ after he has adopted scientific opinions irreconcilable with Eastern
+ Orthodoxy, or, indeed, with dogmatic Christianity of any kind. In the
+ confessional the priest never seeks to ferret out heretical opinions; and
+ I can recall no instance in Russian history of a man being burnt at the
+ stake on the demand of the ecclesiastical authorities, as so often
+ happened in the Roman Catholic world, for his scientific views. This
+ tolerance proceeds partly, no doubt, from the fact that the Eastern Church
+ in general, and the Russian Church in particular, have remained for
+ centuries in a kind of intellectual torpor. Even such a fervent orthodox
+ Christian as the late Ivan Aksakof perceived this absence of healthy
+ vitality, and he did not hesitate to declare his conviction that, "neither
+ the Russian nor the Slavonic world will be resuscitated . . . so long as
+ the Church remains in such lifelessness (mertvennost'), which is not a
+ matter of chance, but the legitimate fruit of some organic defect."*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Solovyoff, "Otcherki ig istorii Russkoi Literaturi XIX.
+ veka." St. Petersburg, 1903, p. 269.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Though the unsatisfactory condition of the parochial clergy is generally
+ recognised by the educated classes, very few people take the trouble to
+ consider seriously how it might be improved. During the Reform enthusiasm
+ which raged for some years after the Crimean War ecclesiastical affairs
+ were entirely overlooked. Many of the reformers of those days were so very
+ "advanced" that religion in all its forms seemed to them an old-world
+ superstition which tended to retard rather than accelerate social
+ progress, and which consequently should be allowed to die as tranquilly as
+ possible; whilst the men of more moderate views found they had enough to
+ do in emancipating the serfs and reforming the corrupt civil and judicial
+ Administration. During the subsequent reactionary period, which culminated
+ in the reign of the late Emperor, Alexander III., much more attention was
+ devoted to Church matters, and it came to be recognised in official
+ circles that something ought to be done for the parish clergy in the way
+ of improving their material condition so as to increase their moral
+ influence. With this object in view, M. Pobedonostsef, the Procurator of
+ the Holy Synod, induced the Government in 1893 to make a State-grant of
+ about 6,500,000 roubles, which should be increased every year, but the sum
+ was very inadequate, and a large portion of it was devoted to purposes of
+ political propaganda in the form of maintaining Greek Orthodox priests in
+ districts where the population was Protestant or Roman Catholic.
+ Consequently, of the 35,865 parishes which Russia contains, only 18,936,
+ or a little more than one-half, were enabled to benefit by the grant. In
+ an optimistic, semi-official statement published as late as 1896 it is
+ admitted that "the means for the support of the parish clergy must even
+ now be considered insufficient and wanting in stability, making the
+ priests dependent on the parishioners, and thereby preventing the
+ establishment of the necessary moral authority of the spiritual father
+ over his flock."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In some places the needs of the Church are attended to by voluntary
+ parish-curatorships which annually raise a certain sum of money, and the
+ way in which they distribute it is very characteristic of the Russian
+ people, who have a profound veneration for the Church and its rites, but
+ very little consideration for the human beings who serve at the altar. In
+ 14,564 parishes possessing such curatorships no less than 2,500,000
+ roubles were collected, but of this sum 2,000,000 were expended on the
+ maintenance and embellishment of churches, and only 174,000 were devoted
+ to the personal wants of the clergy. According to the semi-official
+ document from which these figures are taken the whole body of the Russian
+ White Clergy in 1893 numbered 99,391, of whom 42,513 were priests, 12,953
+ deacons, and 43,925 clerks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In more recent observations among the parochial clergy I have noticed
+ premonitory symptoms of important changes. This may be illustrated by an
+ entry in my note-book, written in a village of one of the Southern
+ provinces, under date of 30th September, 1903:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have made here the acquaintance of two good specimens of the parish
+ clergy, both excellent men in their way, but very different from each
+ other. The elder one, Father Dmitri, is of the old school, a plain,
+ practical man, who fulfils his duties conscientiously according to his
+ lights, but without enthusiasm. His intellectual wants are very limited,
+ and he devotes his attention chiefly to the practical affairs of everyday
+ life, which he manages very successfully. He does not squeeze his
+ parishioners unduly, but he considers that the labourer is worthy of his
+ hire, and insists on his flock providing for his wants according to their
+ means. At the same time he farms on his own account and attends personally
+ to all the details of his farming operations. With the condition and
+ doings of every member of his flock he is intimately acquainted, and, on
+ the whole, as he never idealised anything or anybody, he has not a very
+ high opinion of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The younger priest, Father Alexander, is of a different type, and the
+ difference may be remarked even in his external appearance. There is a
+ look of delicacy and refinement about him, though his dress and domestic
+ surroundings are of the plainest, and there is not a tinge of affectation
+ in his manner. His language is less archaic and picturesque. He uses fewer
+ Biblical and semi-Slavonic expressions&mdash;I mean expressions which
+ belong to the antiquated language of the Church Service rather than to
+ modern parlance&mdash;and his armoury of terse popular proverbs which
+ constitute such a characteristic trait of the peasantry, is less
+ frequently drawn on. When I ask him about the present condition of the
+ peasantry, his account does not differ substantially from that of his
+ elder colleague, but he does not condemn their sins in the same forcible
+ terms. He laments their shortcomings in an evangelical spirit and has
+ apparently aspirations for their future improvement. Admitting frankly
+ that there is a great deal of lukewarmness among them, he hopes to revive
+ their interest in ecclesiastical affairs and he has an idea of
+ constituting a sort of church committee for attending to the temporal
+ affairs of the village church and for works of charity, but he looks to
+ influencing the younger rather than the older generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His interest in his parishioners is not confined to their spiritual
+ welfare, but extends to their material well-being. Of late an association
+ for mutual credit has been founded in the village, and he uses his
+ influence to induce the peasants to take advantage of the benefits it
+ offers, both to those who are in need of a little ready money and to those
+ who might invest their savings, instead of keeping them hidden away in an
+ old stocking or buried in an earthen pot. The proposal to create a local
+ agricultural society meets also with his sympathy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the number of parish priests of this type increase, the clergy may come
+ to exercise great moral influence on the common people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ A MEDICAL CONSULTATION
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Unexpected Illness&mdash;A Village Doctor&mdash;Siberian Plague&mdash;My
+ Studies&mdash;Russian Historians&mdash;A Russian Imitator of Dickens&mdash;A
+ ci-devant Domestic Serf&mdash;Medicine and Witchcraft&mdash;A Remnant of
+ Paganism&mdash;Credulity of the Peasantry&mdash;Absurd Rumours&mdash;A
+ Mysterious Visit from St. Barbara&mdash;Cholera on Board a Steamer&mdash;Hospitals&mdash;Lunatic
+ Asylums&mdash;Amongst Maniacs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In enumerating the requisites for travelling in the less frequented parts
+ of Russia, I omitted to mention one important condition: the traveller
+ should be always in good health, and in case of illness be ready to
+ dispense with regular medical attendance. This I learned by experience
+ during my stay at Ivanofka.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man who is accustomed to be always well, and has consequently cause to
+ believe himself exempt from the ordinary ills that flesh is heir to,
+ naturally feels aggrieved&mdash;as if some one had inflicted upon him an
+ undeserved injury&mdash;when he suddenly finds himself ill. At first he
+ refuses to believe the fact, and, as far as possible, takes no notice of
+ the disagreeable symptoms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was my state of mind on being awakened early one morning by peculiar
+ symptoms which I had never before experienced. Unwilling to admit to
+ myself the possibility of being ill, I got up, and endeavoured to dress as
+ usual, but very soon discovered that I was unable to stand. There was no
+ denying the fact; not only was I ill, but the malady, whatever it was,
+ surpassed my powers of diagnosis; and when the symptoms increased steadily
+ all that day and the following night, I was constrained to take the
+ humiliating decision of asking for medical advice. To my inquiries whether
+ there was a doctor in the neighbourhood, the old servant replied, "There
+ is not exactly a doctor, but there is a Feldsher in the village."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what is a Feldsher?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A Feldsher is . . . . is a Feldsher."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am quite aware of that, but I would like to know what you mean by the
+ word. What is this Feldsher?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He's an old soldier who dresses wounds and gives physic."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The definition did not predispose me in favour of the mysterious
+ personage, but as there was nothing better to be had I ordered him to be
+ sent for, notwithstanding the strenuous opposition of the old servant, who
+ evidently did not believe in feldshers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In about half an hour a tall, broad-shouldered man entered, and stood bolt
+ upright in the middle of the room in the attitude which is designated in
+ military language by the word "Attention." His clean-shaven chin, long
+ moustache, and closely-cropped hair confirmed one part of the old
+ servant's definition; he was unmistakably an old soldier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are a Feldsher," I said, making use of the word which I had recently
+ added to my vocabulary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Exactly so, your Nobility!" These words, the ordinary form of affirmation
+ used by soldiers to their officers, were pronounced in a loud, metallic,
+ monotonous tone, as if the speaker had been an automaton conversing with a
+ brother automaton at a distance of twenty yards. As soon as the words were
+ pronounced the mouth of the machine closed spasmodically, and the head,
+ which had been momentarily turned towards me, reverted to its former
+ position with a jerk as if it had received the order "Eyes front!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then please to sit down here, and I'll tell you about my ailment." Upon
+ this the figure took three paces to the front, wheeled to the right-about,
+ and sat down on the edge of the chair, retaining the position of
+ "Attention" as nearly as the sitting posture would allow. When the
+ symptoms had been carefully described, he knitted his brows, and after
+ some reflection remarked, "I can give you a dose of . . . ." Here followed
+ a long word which I did not understand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't wish you to give me a dose of anything till I know what is the
+ matter with me. Though a bit of a doctor myself, I have no idea what it
+ is, and, pardon me, I think you are in the same position." Noticing a look
+ of ruffled professional dignity on his face, I added, as a sedative, "It
+ is evidently something very peculiar, so that if the first medical
+ practitioner in the country were present he would probably be as much
+ puzzled as ourselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sedative had the desired effect. "Well, sir, to tell you the truth,"
+ he said, in a more human tone of voice, "I do not clearly understand what
+ it is."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Exactly; and therefore I think we had better leave the cure to Nature,
+ and not interfere with her mode of treatment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps it would be better."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No doubt. And now, since I have to lie here on my back, and feel rather
+ lonely, I should like to have a talk with you. You are not in a hurry, I
+ hope?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at all. My assistant knows where I am, and will send for me if I am
+ required."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So you have an assistant, have you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes; a very sharp young fellow, who has been two years in the
+ Feldsher school, and has now come here to help me and learn more by
+ practice. That is a new way. I never was at a school of the kind myself,
+ and had to pick up what I could when a servant in the hospital. There
+ were, I believe, no such schools in my time. The one where my assistant
+ learned was opened by the Zemstvo."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Zemstvo is the new local administration, is it not?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Exactly so. And I could not do without the assistant," continued my new
+ acquaintance, gradually losing his rigidity, and showing himself, what he
+ really was, a kindly, talkative man. "I have often to go to other
+ villages, and almost every day a number of peasants come here. At first I
+ had very little to do, for the people thought I was an official, and would
+ make them pay dearly for what I should give them; but now they know that
+ they don't require to pay, and come in great numbers. And everything I
+ give them&mdash;though sometimes I don't clearly understand what the
+ matter is&mdash;seems to do them good. I believe that faith does as much
+ as physic."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In my country," I remarked, "there is a sect of doctors who get the
+ benefit of that principle. They give their patients two or three little
+ balls no bigger than a pin's head, or a few drops of tasteless liquid, and
+ they sometimes work wonderful cures."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That system would not do for us. The Russian muzhik would have no faith
+ if he swallowed merely things of that kind. What he believes in is
+ something with a very bad taste, and lots of it. That is his idea of a
+ medicine; and he thinks that the more he takes of a medicine the better
+ chance he has of getting well. When I wish to give a peasant several doses
+ I make him come for each separate dose, for I know that if I did not he
+ would probably swallow the whole as soon as he was out of sight. But there
+ is not much serious disease here&mdash;not like what I used to see on the
+ Sheksna. You have been on the Sheksna?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not yet, but I intend going there." The Sheksna is a river which falls
+ into the Volga, and forms part of the great system of water-communication
+ connecting the Volga with the Neva.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When you go there you will see lots of diseases. If there is a hot
+ summer, and plenty of barges passing, something is sure to break out&mdash;typhus,
+ or black small-pox, or Siberian plague, or something of the kind. That
+ Siberian plague is a curious thing. Whether it really comes from Siberia,
+ God only knows. So soon as it breaks out the horses die by dozens, and
+ sometimes men and women are attacked, though it is not properly a human
+ disease. They say that flies carry the poison from the dead horses to the
+ people. The sign of it is a thing like a boil, with a dark-coloured rim.
+ If this is cut open in time the person may recover, but if it is not, the
+ person dies. There is cholera, too, sometimes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What a delightful country," I said to myself, "for a young doctor who
+ wishes to make discoveries in the science of disease!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The catalogue of diseases inhabiting this favoured region was apparently
+ not yet complete, but it was cut short for the moment by the arrival of
+ the assistant, with the announcement that his superior was wanted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This first interview with the feldsher was, on the whole, satisfactory. He
+ had not rendered me any medical assistance, but he had helped me to pass
+ an hour pleasantly, and had given me a little information of the kind I
+ desired. My later interviews with him were equally agreeable. He was
+ naturally an intelligent, observant man, who had seen a great deal of the
+ Russian world, and could describe graphically what he had seen.
+ Unfortunately the horizontal position to which I was condemned prevented
+ me from noting down at the time the interesting things which he related to
+ me. His visits, together with those of Karl Karl'itch and of the priest,
+ who kindly spent a great part of his time with me, helped me to while away
+ many an hour which would otherwise have been dreary enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the intervals when I was alone I devoted myself to reading&mdash;sometimes
+ Russian history and sometimes works of fiction. The history was that of
+ Karamzin, who may fairly be called the Russian Livy. It interested me much
+ by the facts which it contained, but irritated me not a little by the
+ rhetorical style in which it is written. Afterwards, when I had waded
+ through some twenty volumes of the gigantic work of Solovyoff&mdash;or
+ Solovief, as the name is sometimes unphonetically written&mdash;which is
+ simply a vast collection of valuable but undigested material, I was much
+ less severe on the picturesque descriptions and ornate style of his
+ illustrious predecessor. The first work of fiction which I read was a
+ collection of tales by Grigorovitch, which had been given to me by the
+ author on my departure from St. Petersburg. These tales, descriptive of
+ rural life in Russia, had been written, as the author afterwards admitted
+ to me, under the influence of Dickens. Many of the little tricks and
+ affectations which became painfully obtrusive in Dickens's later works I
+ had no difficulty in recognising under their Russian garb. In spite of
+ these I found the book very pleasant reading, and received from it some
+ new notions&mdash;to be afterwards verified, of course&mdash;about Russian
+ peasant life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of these tales made a deep impression upon me, and I still remember
+ the chief incidents. The story opens with the description of a village in
+ late autumn. It has been raining for some time heavily, and the road has
+ become covered with a deep layer of black mud. An old woman&mdash;a small
+ proprietor&mdash;is sitting at home with a friend, drinking tea and trying
+ to read the future by means of a pack of cards. This occupation is
+ suddenly interrupted by the entrance of a female servant, who announces
+ that she has discovered an old man, apparently very ill, lying in one of
+ the outhouses. The old woman goes out to see her uninvited guest, and,
+ being of a kindly nature, prepares to have him removed to a more
+ comfortable place, and properly attended to; but her servant whispers to
+ her that perhaps he is a vagrant, and the generous impulse is thereby
+ checked. When it is discovered that the suspicion is only too well
+ founded, and that the man has no passport, the old woman becomes
+ thoroughly alarmed. Her imagination pictures to her the terrible
+ consequences that would ensue if the police should discover that she had
+ harboured a vagrant. All her little fortune might be extorted from her.
+ And if the old man should happen to die in her house or farmyard! The
+ consequences in that case might be very serious. Not only might she lose
+ everything, but she might even be dragged to prison. At the sight of these
+ dangers the old woman forgets her tender-heartedness, and becomes
+ inexorable. The old man, sick unto death though he be, must leave the
+ premises instantly. Knowing full well that he will nowhere find a refuge,
+ he walks forth into the cold, dark, stormy night, and next morning a dead
+ body is found at a short distance from the village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why this story, which was not strikingly remarkable for artistic merit,
+ impressed me so deeply I cannot say. Perhaps it was because I was myself
+ ill at the time, and imagined how terrible it would be to be turned out on
+ the muddy road on a cold, wet October night. Besides this, the story
+ interested me as illustrating the terror which the police inspired during
+ the reign of Nicholas I. The ingenious devices which they employed for
+ extorting money formed the subject of another sketch, which I read shortly
+ afterwards, and which has likewise remained in my memory. The facts were
+ as follows: An officer of rural police, when driving on a country road,
+ finds a dead body by the wayside. Congratulating himself on this bit of
+ good luck, he proceeds to the nearest village, and lets the inhabitants
+ know that all manner of legal proceedings will be taken against them, so
+ that the supposed murderer may be discovered. The peasants are of course
+ frightened, and give him a considerable sum of money in order that he may
+ hush up the affair. An ordinary officer of police would have been quite
+ satisfied with this ransom, but this officer is not an ordinary man, and
+ is very much in need of money; he conceives, therefore, the brilliant idea
+ of repeating the experiment. Taking up the dead body, he takes it away in
+ his tarantass, and a few hours later declares to the inhabitants of a
+ village some miles off that some of them have been guilty of murder, and
+ that he intends to investigate the matter thoroughly. The peasants of
+ course pay liberally in order to escape the investigation, and the
+ rascally officer, emboldened by success, repeats the trick in different
+ villages until he has gathered a large sum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tales and sketches of this kind were very much in fashion during the years
+ which followed the death of the great autocrat, Nicholas I., when the
+ long-pent-up indignation against his severe, repressive regime was
+ suddenly allowed free expression, and they were still much read during the
+ first years of my stay in the country. Now the public taste has changed.
+ The reform enthusiast has evaporated, and the existing administrative
+ abuses, more refined and less comical than their predecessors, receive
+ comparatively little attention from the satirists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I did not feel disposed to read, and had none of my regular visitors
+ with me, I sometimes spent an hour or two in talking with the old
+ man-servant who attended me. Anton was decidedly an old man, but what his
+ age precisely was I never could discover; either he did not know himself,
+ or he did not wish to tell me. In appearance he seemed about sixty, but
+ from certain remarks which he made I concluded that he must be nearer
+ seventy, though he had scarcely a grey hair on his head. As to who his
+ father was he seemed, like the famous Topsy, to have no very clear ideas,
+ but he had an advantage over Topsy with regard to his maternal ancestry.
+ His mother had been a serf who had fulfilled for some time the functions
+ of a lady's maid, and after the death of her mistress had been promoted to
+ a not very clearly defined position of responsibility in the household.
+ Anton, too, had been promoted in his time. His first function in the
+ household had been that of assistant-keeper of the tobacco-pipes, from
+ which humble office he had gradually risen to a position which may be
+ roughly designated as that of butler. All this time he had been, of
+ course, a serf, as his mother had been before him; but being naturally a
+ man of sluggish intellect, he had never thoroughly realised the fact, and
+ had certainly never conceived the possibility of being anything different
+ from what he was. His master was master, and he himself was Anton, obliged
+ to obey his master, or at least conceal disobedience&mdash;these were long
+ the main facts in his conception of the universe, and, as philosophers
+ generally do with regard to fundamental facts or axioms, he had accepted
+ them without examination. By means of these simple postulates he had led a
+ tranquil life, untroubled by doubts, until the year 1861, when the
+ so-called freedom was brought to Ivanofka. He himself had not gone to the
+ church to hear Batushka read the Tsar's manifesto, but his master, on
+ returning from the ceremony, had called him and said, "Anton, you are free
+ now, but the Tsar says you are to serve as you have done for two years
+ longer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this startling announcement Anton had replied coolly, "Slushayus," or,
+ as we would say, "Yes, sir," and without further comment had gone to fetch
+ his master's breakfast; but what he saw and heard during the next few
+ weeks greatly troubled his old conceptions of human society and the
+ fitness of things. From that time must be dated, I suppose, the expression
+ of mental confusion which his face habitually wore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first thing that roused his indignation was the conduct of his
+ fellow-servants. Nearly all the unmarried ones seemed to be suddenly
+ attacked by a peculiar matrimonial mania. The reason of this was that the
+ new law expressly gave permission to the emancipated serfs to marry as
+ they chose without the consent of their masters, and nearly all the
+ unmarried adults hastened to take advantage of their newly-acquired
+ privilege, though many of them had great difficulty in raising the capital
+ necessary to pay the priest's fees. Then came disorders among the
+ peasantry, the death of the old master, and the removal of the family
+ first to St. Petersburg, and afterwards to Germany. Anton's mind had never
+ been of a very powerful order, and these great events had exercised a
+ deleterious influence upon it. When Karl Karl'itch, at the expiry of the
+ two years, informed him that he might now go where he chose, he replied,
+ with a look of blank, unfeigned astonishment, "Where can I go to?" He had
+ never conceived the possibility of being forced to earn his bread in some
+ new way, and begged Karl Karl'itch to let him remain where he was. This
+ request was readily granted, for Anton was an honest, faithful servant,
+ and sincerely attached to the family, and it was accordingly arranged that
+ he should receive a small monthly salary, and occupy an intermediate
+ position between those of major-domo and head watch-dog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Anton been transformed into a real watch-dog he could scarcely have
+ slept more than he did. His power of sleeping, and his somnolence when he
+ imagined he was awake, were his two most prominent characteristics. Out of
+ consideration for his years and his love of repose, I troubled him as
+ little as possible; but even the small amount of service which I demanded
+ he contrived to curtail in an ingenious way. The time and exertion
+ required for traversing the intervening space between his own room and
+ mine might, he thought, be more profitably employed; and accordingly he
+ extemporised a bed in a small ante-chamber, close to my door, and took up
+ there his permanent abode. If sonorous snoring be sufficient proof that
+ the performer is asleep, then I must conclude that Anton devoted about
+ three-fourths of his time to sleeping and a large part of the remaining
+ fourth to yawning and elongated guttural ejaculations. At first this
+ little arrangement considerably annoyed me, but I bore it patiently, and
+ afterwards received my reward, for during my illness I found it very
+ convenient to have an attendant within call. And I must do Anton the
+ justice to say that he served me well in his own somnolent fashion. He
+ seemed to have the faculty of hearing when asleep, and generally appeared
+ in my room before he had succeeded in getting his eyes completely open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anton had never found time, during his long life, to form many opinions,
+ but he had somehow imbibed or inhaled a few convictions, all of a
+ decidedly conservative kind, and one of these was that feldshers were
+ useless and dangerous members of society. Again and again he had advised
+ me to have nothing to do with the one who visited me, and more than once
+ he recommended to me an old woman of the name of Masha, who lived in a
+ village a few miles off. Masha was what is known in Russia as a znakharka&mdash;that
+ is to say, a woman who is half witch, half medical practitioner&mdash;the
+ whole permeated with a strong leaven of knavery. According to Anton, she
+ could effect by means of herbs and charms every possible cure short of
+ raising from the dead, and even with regard to this last operation he
+ cautiously refrained from expressing an opinion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The idea of being subjected to a course of herbs and charms by an old
+ woman who probably knew very little about the hidden properties of either,
+ did not seem to me inviting, and more than once I flatly refused to have
+ recourse to such unhallowed means. On due consideration, however, I
+ thought that a professional interview with the old witch would be rather
+ amusing, and then a brilliant idea occurred to me! I would bring together
+ the feldsher and the znakharka, who no doubt hated each other with a
+ Kilkenny-cat hatred, and let them fight out their differences before me
+ for the benefit of science and my own delectation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The more I thought of my project, the more I congratulated myself on
+ having conceived such a scheme; but, alas! in this very imperfectly
+ organised world of ours brilliant ideas are seldom realised, and in this
+ case I was destined to be disappointed. Did the old woman's black art warn
+ her of approaching danger, or was she simply actuated by a feeling of
+ professional jealousy and considerations of professional etiquette? To
+ this question I can give no positive answer, but certain it is that she
+ could not be induced to pay me a visit, and I was thus balked of my
+ expected amusement. I succeeded, however, in learning indirectly something
+ about the old witch. She enjoyed among her neighbours that solid, durable
+ kind of respect which is founded on vague, undefinable fear, and was
+ believed to have effected many remarkable cures. In the treatment of
+ syphilitic diseases, which are fearfully common among the Russian
+ peasantry, she was supposed to be specially successful, and I have no
+ doubt, from the vague descriptions which I received, that the charm which
+ she employed in these cases was of a mercurial kind. Some time afterward I
+ saw one of her victims. Whether she had succeeded in destroying the poison
+ I know not, but she had at least succeeded in destroying most completely
+ the patient's teeth. How women of this kind obtain mercury, and how they
+ have discovered its medicinal properties, I cannot explain. Neither can I
+ explain how they have come to know the peculiar properties of ergot of
+ rye, which they frequently employ for illicit purposes familiar to all
+ students of medical jurisprudence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The znakharka and the feldsher represent two very different periods in the
+ history of medical science&mdash;the magical and the scientific. The
+ Russian peasantry have still many conceptions which belong to the former.
+ The great majority of them are already quite willing, under ordinary
+ circumstances, to use the scientific means of healing; but as soon as a
+ violent epidemic breaks out, and the scientific means prove unequal to the
+ occasion, the old faith revives, and recourse is had to magical rites and
+ incantations. Of these rites many are very curious. Here, for instance, is
+ one which had been performed in a village near which I afterwards lived
+ for some time. Cholera had been raging in the district for several weeks.
+ In the village in question no case had yet occurred, but the inhabitants
+ feared that the dreaded visitor would soon arrive, and the following
+ ingenious contrivance was adopted for warding off the danger. At midnight,
+ when the male population was supposed to be asleep, all the maidens met in
+ nocturnal costume, according to a preconcerted plan, and formed a
+ procession. In front marched a girl, holding an Icon. Behind her came her
+ companions, dragging a sokha&mdash;the primitive plough commonly used by
+ the peasantry&mdash;by means of a long rope. In this order the procession
+ made the circuit of the entire village, and it was confidently believed
+ that the cholera would not be able to overstep the magical circle thus
+ described. Many of the males probably knew, or at least suspected, what
+ was going on; but they prudently remained within doors, knowing well that
+ if they should be caught peeping indiscreetly at the mystic ceremony, they
+ would be unmercifully beaten by those who were taking part in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This custom is doubtless a survival of old pagan superstitions. The
+ introduction of the Icon is a modern innovation, which illustrates that
+ curious blending of paganism and Christianity which is often to be met
+ with in Russia, and of which I shall have more to say in another chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes, when an epidemic breaks out, the panic produced takes a more
+ dangerous form. The people suspect that it is the work of the doctors, or
+ that some ill-disposed persons have poisoned the wells, and no amount of
+ reasoning will convince them that their own habitual disregard of the most
+ simple sanitary precautions has something to do with the phenomenon. I
+ know of one case where an itinerant photographer was severely maltreated
+ in consequence of such suspicions; and once, in St. Petersburg, during the
+ reign of Nicholas I., a serious riot took place. The excited populace had
+ already thrown several doctors out of the windows of the hospital, when
+ the Emperor arrived, unattended, in an open carriage, and quelled the
+ disturbance by his simple presence, aided by his stentorian voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the ignorant credulity of the Russian peasantry I might relate many
+ curious illustrations. The most absurd rumours sometimes awaken
+ consternation throughout a whole district. One of the most common reports
+ of this kind is that a female conscription is about to take place. About
+ the time of the Duke of Edinburgh's marriage with the daughter of
+ Alexander II. this report was specially frequent. A large number of young
+ girls were to be kidnapped and sent to England in a red ship. Why the ship
+ was to be red I can easily explain, because in the peasants' language the
+ conceptions of red and beautiful are expressed by the same word (krasny),
+ and in the popular legends the epithet is indiscriminately applied to
+ everything connected with princes and great personages; but what was to be
+ done with the kidnapped maidens when they arrived at their destination, I
+ never succeeded in discovering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most amusing instance of credulity which I can recall was the
+ following, related to me by a peasant woman who came from the village
+ where the incident had occurred. One day in winter, about the time of
+ sunset, a peasant family was startled by the entrance of a strange
+ visitor, a female figure, dressed as St. Barbara is commonly represented
+ in the religious pictures. All present were very much astonished by this
+ apparition; but the figure told them, in a low, soft voice, to be of good
+ cheer, for she was St. Barbara, and had come to honour the family with a
+ visit as a reward for their piety. The peasant thus favoured was not
+ remarkable for his piety, but he did not consider it necessary to correct
+ the mistake of his saintly visitor, and requested her to be seated. With
+ perfect readiness she accepted the invitation, and began at once to
+ discourse in an edifying way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the news of this wonderful apparition spread like wildfire, and
+ all the inhabitants of the village, as well as those of a neighbouring
+ village about a mile distant, collected in and around the house. Whether
+ the priest was among those who came my informant did not know. Many of
+ those who had come could not get within hearing, but those at the
+ outskirts of the crowd hoped that the saint might come out before
+ disappearing. Their hopes were gratified. About midnight the mysterious
+ visitor announced that she would go and bring St. Nicholas, the
+ miracle-worker, and requested all to remain perfectly still during her
+ absence. The crowd respectfully made way for her, and she passed out into
+ the darkness. With breathless expectation all awaited the arrival of St.
+ Nicholas, who is the favourite saint of the Russian peasantry; but hours
+ passed, and he did not appear. At last, toward sunrise, some of the less
+ zealous spectators began to return home, and those of them who had come
+ from the neighbouring village discovered to their horror that during their
+ absence their horses had been stolen! At once they raised the hue-and-cry;
+ and the peasants scoured the country in all directions in search of the
+ soi-disant St. Barbara and her accomplices, but they never recovered the
+ stolen property. "And serve them right, the blockheads!" added my
+ informant, who had herself escaped falling into the trap by being absent
+ from the village at the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is but fair to add that the ordinary Russian peasant, though in some
+ respects extremely credulous, and, like all other people, subject to
+ occasional panics, is by no means easily frightened by real dangers. Those
+ who have seen them under fire will readily credit this statement. For my
+ own part, I have had opportunities of observing them merely in dangers of
+ a non-military kind, and have often admired the perfect coolness
+ displayed. Even an epidemic alarms them only when it attains a certain
+ degree of intensity. Once I had a good opportunity of observing this on
+ board a large steamer on the Volga. It was a very hot day in the early
+ autumn. As it was well known that there was a great deal of Asiatic
+ cholera all over the country, prudent people refrained from eating much
+ raw fruit; but Russian peasants are not generally prudent men, and I
+ noticed that those on board were consuming enormous quantities of raw
+ cucumbers and water-melons. This imprudence was soon followed by its
+ natural punishment. I refrain from describing the scene that ensued, but I
+ may say that those who were attacked received from the others every
+ possible assistance. Had no unforeseen accident happened, we should have
+ arrived at Kazan on the following morning, and been able to send the
+ patients to the hospital of that town; but as there was little water in
+ the river, we had to cast anchor for the night, and next morning we ran
+ aground and stuck fast. Here we had to remain patiently till a smaller
+ steamer hove in sight. All this time there was not the slightest symptom
+ of panic, and when the small steamer came alongside there was no frantic
+ rush to get away from the infected vessel, though it was quite evident
+ that only a few of the passengers could be taken off. Those who were
+ nearest the gangway went quietly on board the small steamer, and those who
+ were less fortunate remained patiently till another steamer happened to
+ pass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old conceptions of disease, as something that may be most successfully
+ cured by charms and similar means, are rapidly disappearing. The Zemstvo&mdash;that
+ is to say, the new local self-government&mdash;has done much towards this
+ end by enabling the people to procure better medical attendance. In the
+ towns there are public hospitals, which generally are&mdash;or at least
+ seem to an unprofessional eye&mdash;in a very satisfactory condition. The
+ resident doctors are daily besieged by a crowd of peasants, who come from
+ far and near to ask advice and receive medicines. Besides this, in some
+ provinces feldshers are placed in the principal villages, and the doctor
+ makes frequent tours of inspection. The doctors are generally
+ well-educated men, and do a large amount of work for a very small
+ remuneration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the lunatic asylums, which are generally attached to the larger
+ hospitals, I cannot speak very favourably. Some of the great central ones
+ are all that could be desired, but others are badly constructed and
+ fearfully overcrowded. One or two of those I visited appeared to me to be
+ conducted on very patriarchal principles, as the following incident may
+ illustrate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had been visiting a large hospital, and had remained there so long that
+ it was already dark before I reached the adjacent lunatic asylum. Seeing
+ no lights in the windows, I proposed to my companion, who was one of the
+ inspectors, that we should delay our visit till the following morning, but
+ he assured me that by the regulations the lights ought not to be
+ extinguished till considerably later, and consequently there was no
+ objection to our going in at once. If there was no legal objection, there
+ was at least a physical obstruction in the form of a large wooden door,
+ and all our efforts to attract the attention of the porter or some other
+ inmate were unavailing. At last, after much ringing, knocking, and
+ shouting, a voice from within asked us who we were and what we wanted. A
+ brief reply from my companion, not couched in the most polite or amiable
+ terms, made the bolts rattle and the door open with surprising rapidity,
+ and we saw before us an old man with long dishevelled hair, who, as far as
+ appearance went, might have been one of the lunatics, bowing obsequiously
+ and muttering apologies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After groping our way along a dark corridor we entered a still darker
+ room, and the door was closed and locked behind us. As the key turned in
+ the rusty lock a wild scream rang through the darkness! Then came a yell,
+ then a howl, and then various sounds which the poverty of the English
+ language prevents me from designating&mdash;the whole blending into a
+ hideous discord that would have been at home in some of the worst regions
+ of Dante's Inferno. As to the cause of it I could not even form a
+ conjecture. Gradually my eyes became accustomed to the darkness, and I
+ could dimly perceive white figures flitting about the room. At the same
+ time I felt something standing near me, and close to my shoulder I saw a
+ pair of eyes and long streaming hair. On my other side, equally close, was
+ something very like a woman's night-cap. Though by no means of a nervous
+ temperament, I felt uncomfortable. To be shut up in a dark room with an
+ indefinite number of excited maniacs is not a comfortable position. How
+ long the imprisonment lasted I know not&mdash;probably not more than two
+ or three minutes, but it seemed a long time. At last a light was procured,
+ and the whole affair was explained. The guardians, not expecting the visit
+ of an inspector at so late an hour, had retired for the night much earlier
+ than usual, and the old porter had put us into the nearest ward until he
+ could fetch a light&mdash;locking the door behind us lest any of the
+ lunatics should escape. The noise had awakened one of the unfortunate
+ inmates of the ward, and her hysterical scream had terrified the others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the influence of asylums, hospitals, and similar institutions, the old
+ conceptions of disease, as I have said, are gradually dying out, but the
+ znakharka still finds practice. The fact that the znakharka is to be found
+ side by side not only with the feldsher, but also with the highly trained
+ bacteriologist, is very characteristic of Russian civilisation, which is a
+ strange conglomeration of products belonging to very different periods.
+ The enquirer who undertakes the study of it will sometimes be scarcely
+ less surprised than would be the naturalist who should unexpectedly
+ stumble upon antediluvian megatheria grazing tranquilly in the same field
+ with prize Southdowns. He will discover the most primitive institutions
+ side by side with the latest products of French doctrinairism, and the
+ most childish superstitions in close proximity with the most advanced
+ free-thinking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ A PEASANT FAMILY OF THE OLD TYPE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Ivan Petroff&mdash;His Past Life&mdash;Co-operative Associations&mdash;Constitution
+ of a Peasant's Household&mdash;Predominance of Economic Conceptions over
+ those of Blood-relationship&mdash;Peasant Marriages&mdash;Advantages of
+ Living in Large Families&mdash;Its Defects&mdash;Family Disruptions and
+ their Consequences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My illness had at least one good result. It brought me into contact with
+ the feldsher, and through him, after my recovery, I made the acquaintance
+ of several peasants living in the village. Of these by far the most
+ interesting was an old man called Ivan Petroff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ivan must have been about sixty years of age, but was still robust and
+ strong, and had the reputation of being able to mow more hay in a given
+ time than any other peasant in the village. His head would have made a
+ line study for a portrait-painter. Like Russian peasants in general, he
+ wore his hair parted in the middle&mdash;a custom which perhaps owes its
+ origin to the religious pictures. The reverend appearance given to his
+ face by his long fair beard, slightly tinged with grey, was in part
+ counteracted by his eyes, which had a strange twinkle in them&mdash;whether
+ of humour or of roguery, it was difficult to say. Under all circumstances&mdash;whether
+ in his light, nondescript summer costume, or in his warm sheep-skin, or in
+ the long, glossy, dark-blue, double-breasted coat which he put on
+ occasionally on Sundays and holidays&mdash;he always looked a well-fed,
+ respectable, prosperous member of society; whilst his imperturbable
+ composure, and the entire absence of obsequiousness or truculence in his
+ manner, indicated plainly that he possessed no small amount of calm,
+ deep-rooted self-respect. A stranger, on seeing him, might readily have
+ leaped to the conclusion that he must be the Village Elder, but in reality
+ he was a simple member of the Commune, like his neighbour, poor Zakhar
+ Leshkof, who never let slip an opportunity of getting drunk, was always in
+ debt, and, on the whole, possessed a more than dubious reputation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ivan had, it is true, been Village Elder some years before. When elected
+ by the Village Assembly, against his own wishes, he had said quietly,
+ "Very well, children; I will serve my three years"; and at the end of that
+ period, when the Assembly wished to re-elect him, he had answered firmly,
+ "No, children; I have served my term. It is now the turn of some one who
+ is younger, and has more time. There's Peter Alekseyef, a good fellow, and
+ an honest; you may choose him." And the Assembly chose the peasant
+ indicated; for Ivan, though a simple member of the Commune, had more
+ influence in Communal affairs than any other half-dozen members put
+ together. No grave matter was decided without his being consulted, and
+ there was at least one instance on record of the Village Assembly
+ postponing deliberations for a week because he happened to be absent in
+ St. Petersburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No stranger casually meeting Ivan would ever for a moment have suspected
+ that that big man, of calm, commanding aspect, had been during a great
+ part of his life a serf. And yet a serf he had been from his birth till he
+ was about thirty years of age&mdash;not merely a serf of the State, but
+ the serf of a proprietor who had lived habitually on his property. For
+ thirty years of his life he had been dependent on the arbitrary will of a
+ master who had the legal power to flog him as often and as severely as he
+ considered desirable. In reality he had never been subjected to corporal
+ punishment, for the proprietor to whom he had belonged had been, though in
+ some respects severe, a just and intelligent master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ivan's bright, sympathetic face had early attracted the master's
+ attention, and it was decided that he should learn a trade. For this
+ purpose he was sent to Moscow, and apprenticed there to a carpenter. After
+ four years of apprenticeship he was able not only to earn his own bread,
+ but to help the household in the payment of their taxes, and to pay
+ annually to his master a fixed yearly sum&mdash;first ten, then twenty,
+ then thirty, and ultimately, for some years immediately before the
+ Emancipation, seventy roubles. In return for this annual sum he was free
+ to work and wander about as he pleased, and for some years he had made
+ ample use of his conditional liberty. I never succeeded in extracting from
+ him a chronological account of his travels, but I could gather from his
+ occasional remarks that he had wandered over a great part of European
+ Russia. Evidently he had been in his youth what is colloquially termed "a
+ roving blade," and had by no means confined himself to the trade which he
+ had learned during his four years of apprenticeship. Once he had helped to
+ navigate a raft from Vetluga to Astrakhan, a distance of about two
+ thousand miles. At another time he had been at Archangel and Onega, on the
+ shores of the White Sea. St. Petersburg and Moscow were both well known to
+ him, and he had visited Odessa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The precise nature of Ivan's occupations during these wanderings I could
+ not ascertain; for, with all his openness of manner, he was extremely
+ reticent regarding his commercial affairs. To all my inquiries on this
+ topic he was wont to reply vaguely, "Lesnoe dyelo"&mdash;that is to say,
+ "Timber business"; and from this I concluded that his chief occupation had
+ been that of a timber merchant. Indeed, when I knew him, though he was no
+ longer a regular trader, he was always ready to buy any bit of forest that
+ could be bought in the vicinity for a reasonable price.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During all this nomadic period of his life Ivan had never entirely severed
+ his connection with his native village or with agricultural life. When
+ about the age of twenty he had spent several months at home, taking part
+ in the field labour, and had married a wife&mdash;a strong, healthy young
+ woman, who had been selected for him by his mother, and strongly
+ recommended to him on account of her good character and her physical
+ strength. In the opinion of Ivan's mother, beauty was a kind of luxury
+ which only nobles and rich merchants could afford, and ordinary comeliness
+ was a very secondary consideration&mdash;so secondary as to be left almost
+ entirely out of sight. This was likewise the opinion of Ivan's wife. She
+ had never been comely herself, she used to say, but she had been a good
+ wife to her husband. He had never complained about her want of good looks,
+ and had never gone after those who were considered good-looking. In
+ expressing this opinion she always first bent forward, then drew herself
+ up to her full length, and finally gave a little jerky nod sideways, so as
+ to clench the statement. Then Ivan's bright eye would twinkle more
+ brightly than usual, and he would ask her how she knew that&mdash;reminding
+ her that he was not always at home. This was Ivan's stereotyped mode of
+ teasing his wife, and every time he employed it he was called an "old
+ scarecrow," or something of the kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps, however, Ivan's jocular remark had more significance in it than
+ his wife cared to admit, for during the first years of their married life
+ they had seen very little of each other. A few days after the marriage,
+ when according to our notions the honeymoon should be at its height, Ivan
+ had gone to Moscow for several months, leaving his young bride to the care
+ of his father and mother. The young bride did not consider this an
+ extraordinary hardship, for many of her companions had been treated in the
+ same way, and according to public opinion in that part of the country
+ there was nothing abnormal in the proceeding. Indeed, it may be said in
+ general that there is very little romance or sentimentality about Russian
+ peasant marriages. In this as in other respects the Russian peasantry are,
+ as a class, extremely practical and matter-of-fact in their conceptions
+ and habits, and are not at all prone to indulge in sublime, ethereal
+ sentiments of any kind. They have little or nothing of what may be termed
+ the Hermann and Dorothea element in their composition, and consequently
+ know very little about those sentimental, romantic ideas which we
+ habitually associate with the preliminary steps to matrimony. Even those
+ authors who endeavour to idealise peasant life have rarely ventured to
+ make their story turn on a sentimental love affair. Certainly in real life
+ the wife is taken as a helpmate, or in plain language a worker, rather
+ than as a companion, and the mother-in-law leaves her very little time to
+ indulge in fruitless dreaming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As time wore on, and his father became older and frailer, Ivan's visits to
+ his native place became longer and more frequent, and when the old man was
+ at last incapable of work, Ivan settled down permanently and undertook the
+ direction of the household. In the meantime his own children had been
+ growing up. When I knew the family it comprised&mdash;besides two
+ daughters who had married early and gone to live with their parents-in-law&mdash;Ivan
+ and his wife, two sons, three daughters-in-law, and an indefinite and
+ frequently varying number of grandchildren. The fact that there were three
+ daughters-in-law and only two sons was the result of the Conscription,
+ which had taken away the youngest son shortly after his marriage. The two
+ who remained spent only a small part of the year at home. The one was a
+ carpenter and the other a bricklayer, and both wandered about the country
+ in search of employment, as their father had done in his younger days.
+ There was, however, one difference. The father had always shown a leaning
+ towards commercial transactions, rather than the simple practice of his
+ handicraft, and consequently he had usually lived and travelled alone. The
+ sons, on the contrary, confined themselves to their handicrafts, and were
+ always during the working season members of an artel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The artel in its various forms is a curious institution. Those to which
+ Ivan's sons belonged were simply temporary, itinerant associations of
+ workmen, who during the summer lived together, fed together, worked
+ together, and periodically divided amongst themselves the profits. This is
+ the primitive form of the institution, and is now not very often met with.
+ Here, as elsewhere, capital has made itself felt, and destroyed that
+ equality which exists among the members of an artel in the above sense of
+ the word. Instead of forming themselves into a temporary association, the
+ workmen now generally make an engagement with a contractor who has a
+ little capital, and receive from him fixed monthly wages. The only
+ association which exists in this case is for the purchase and preparation
+ of provisions, and even these duties are very often left to the
+ contractor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In some of the larger towns there are artels of a much more complex kind&mdash;permanent
+ associations, possessing a large capital, and pecuniarily responsible for
+ the acts of the individual members. Of these, by far the most celebrated
+ is that of the Bank Porters. These men have unlimited opportunities of
+ stealing, and are often entrusted with the guarding or transporting of
+ enormous sums; but the banker has no cause for anxiety, because he knows
+ that if any defalcations occur they will be made good to him by the artel.
+ Such accidents very rarely happen, and the fact is by no means so
+ extraordinary as many people suppose. The artel, being responsible for the
+ individuals of which it is composed, is very careful in admitting new
+ members, and a man when admitted is closely watched, not only by the
+ regularly constituted office-bearers, but also by all his fellow-members
+ who have an opportunity of observing him. If he begins to spend money too
+ freely or to neglect his duties, though his employer may know nothing of
+ the fact, suspicions are at once aroused among his fellow-members, and an
+ investigation ensues&mdash;ending in summary expulsion if the suspicions
+ prove to have been well founded. Mutual responsibility, in short, creates
+ a very effective system of mutual supervision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Ivan's sons, the one who was a carpenter visited his family only
+ occasionally, and at irregular intervals; the bricklayer, on the contrary,
+ as building is impossible in Russia during the cold weather, spent the
+ greater part of the winter at home. Both of them paid a large part of
+ their earnings into the family treasury, over which their father exercised
+ uncontrolled authority. If he wished to make any considerable outlay, he
+ consulted his sons on the subject; but as he was a prudent, intelligent
+ man, and enjoyed the respect and confidence of the family, he never met
+ with any strong opposition. All the field work was performed by him with
+ the assistance of his daughters-in-law; only at harvest time he hired one
+ or two labourers to help him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ivan's household was a good specimen of the Russian peasant family of the
+ old type. Previous to the Emancipation in 1861 there were many households
+ of this kind, containing the representatives of three generations. All the
+ members, young and old, lived together in patriarchal fashion under the
+ direction and authority of the Head of the House, called usually the
+ Khozain&mdash;that is to say, the Administrator; or, in some districts,
+ the Bolshak, which means literally "the Big One." Generally speaking, this
+ important position was occupied by the grandfather, or, if he was dead, by
+ the eldest brother, but the rule was not very strictly observed. If, for
+ instance, the grandfather became infirm, or if the eldest brother was
+ incapacitated by disorderly habits or other cause, the place of authority
+ was taken by some other member&mdash;it might be by a woman&mdash;who was
+ a good manager, and possessed the greatest moral influence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The relations between the Head of the Household and the other members
+ depended on custom and personal character, and they consequently varied
+ greatly in different families. If the Big One was an intelligent man, of
+ decided, energetic character, like my friend Ivan, there was probably
+ perfect discipline in the household, except perhaps in the matter of
+ female tongues, which do not readily submit to the authority even of their
+ owners; but very often it happened that the Big One was not thoroughly
+ well fitted for his post, and in that case endless quarrels and bickerings
+ inevitably took place. Those quarrels were generally caused and fomented
+ by the female members of the family&mdash;a fact which will not seem
+ strange if we try to realise how difficult it must be for several
+ sisters-in-law to live together, with their children and a mother-in-law,
+ within the narrow limits of a peasant's household. The complaints of the
+ young bride, who finds that her mother-in-law puts all the hard work on
+ her shoulders, form a favourite motive in the popular poetry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The house, with its appurtenances, the cattle, the agricultural
+ implements, the grain and other products, the money gained from the sale
+ of these products&mdash;in a word, the house and nearly everything it
+ contained&mdash;were the joint property of the family. Hence nothing was
+ bought or sold by any member&mdash;not even by the Big One himself, unless
+ he possessed an unusual amount of authority&mdash;without the express or
+ tacit consent of the other grown-up males, and all the money that was
+ earned was put into the common purse. When one of the sons left home to
+ work elsewhere, he was expected to bring or send home all his earnings,
+ except what he required for food, lodgings, and other necessary expenses;
+ and if he understood the word "necessary" in too lax a sense, he had to
+ listen to very plain-spoken reproaches when he returned. During his
+ absence, which might last for a whole year or several years, his wife and
+ children remained in the house as before, and the money which he earned
+ could be devoted to the payment of the family taxes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The peasant household of the old type is thus a primitive labour
+ association, of which the members have all things in common, and it is not
+ a little remarkable that the peasant conceives it as such rather than as a
+ family. This is shown by the customary terminology, for the Head of the
+ Household is not called by any word corresponding to Paterfamilias, but is
+ termed, as I have said, Khozain, or Administrator&mdash;a word that is
+ applied equally to a farmer, a shopkeeper or the head of an industrial
+ undertaking, and does not at all convey the idea of blood-relationship. It
+ is likewise shown by what takes place when a household is broken up. On
+ such occasions the degree of blood-relationship is not taken into
+ consideration in the distribution of the property. All the adult male
+ members share equally. Illegitimate and adopted sons, if they have
+ contributed their share of labour, have the same rights as the sons born
+ in lawful wedlock. The married daughter, on the contrary&mdash;being
+ regarded as belonging to her husband's family&mdash;and the son who has
+ previously separated himself from the household, are excluded from the
+ succession. Strictly speaking, the succession or inheritance is confined
+ to the wearing apparel and any little personal effects of a deceased
+ member. The house and all that it contains belong to the little household
+ community; and, consequently, when it is broken up, by the death of the
+ Khozain or other cause, the members do not inherit, but merely appropriate
+ individually what they had hitherto possessed collectively. Thus there is
+ properly no inheritance or succession, but simply liquidation and
+ distribution of the property among the members. The written law of
+ inheritance founded on the conception of personal property, is quite
+ unknown to the peasantry, and quite inapplicable to their mode of life. In
+ this way a large and most important section of the Code remains a dead
+ letter for about four-fifths of the population.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This predominance of practical economic considerations is exemplified also
+ by the way in which marriages are arranged in these large families. In the
+ primitive system of agriculture usually practised in Russia, the natural
+ labour-unit&mdash;if I may use such a term&mdash;comprises a man, a woman,
+ and a horse. As soon, therefore, as a boy becomes an able-bodied labourer
+ he ought to be provided with the two accessories necessary for the
+ completion of the labour-unit. To procure a horse, either by purchase or
+ by rearing a foal, is the duty of the Head of the House; to procure a wife
+ for the youth is the duty of "the female Big One" (Bolshukha). And the
+ chief consideration in determining the choice is in both cases the same.
+ Prudent domestic administrators are not to be tempted by showy horses or
+ beautiful brides; what they seek is not beauty, but physical strength and
+ capacity for work. When the youth reaches the age of eighteen he is
+ informed that he ought to marry at once, and as soon as he gives his
+ consent negotiations are opened with the parents of some eligible young
+ person. In the larger villages the negotiations are sometimes facilitated
+ by certain old women called svakhi, who occupy themselves specially with
+ this kind of mediation; but very often the affair is arranged directly by,
+ or through the agency of, some common friend of the two houses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Care must of course be taken that there is no legal obstacle, and these
+ obstacles are not always easily avoided in a small village, the
+ inhabitants of which have been long in the habit of intermarrying.
+ According to Russian ecclesiastical law, not only is marriage between
+ first-cousins illegal, but affinity is considered as equivalent to
+ consanguinity&mdash;that is to say a mother-in-law and a sister-in-law are
+ regarded as a mother and a sister&mdash;and even the fictitious
+ relationship created by standing together at the baptismal font as
+ godfather and godmother is legally recognised, and may constitute a bar to
+ matrimony. If all the preliminary negotiations are successful, the
+ marriage takes place, and the bridegroom brings his bride home to the
+ house of which he is a member. She brings nothing with her as a dowry
+ except her trousseau, but she brings a pair of good strong arms, and
+ thereby enriches her adopted family. Of course it happens occasionally&mdash;for
+ human nature is everywhere essentially the same&mdash;that a young peasant
+ falls in love with one of his former playmates, and brings his little
+ romance to a happy conclusion at the altar; but such cases are very rare,
+ and as a rule it may be said that the marriages of the Russian peasantry
+ are arranged under the influence of economic rather than sentimental
+ considerations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The custom of living in large families has many economic advantages. We
+ all know the edifying fable of the dying man who showed to his sons by
+ means of a piece of wicker-work the advantages of living together and
+ assisting each other. In ordinary times the necessary expenses of a large
+ household of ten members are considerably less than the combined expenses
+ of two households comprising five members each, and when a "black day"
+ comes a large family can bear temporary adversity much more successfully
+ than a small one. These are principles of world-wide application, but in
+ the life of the Russian peasantry they have a peculiar force. Each adult
+ peasant possesses, as I shall hereafter explain, a share of the Communal
+ land, but this share is not sufficient to occupy all his time and working
+ power. One married pair can easily cultivate two shares&mdash;at least in
+ all provinces where the peasant allotments are not very large. Now, if a
+ family is composed of two married couples, one of the men can go elsewhere
+ and earn money, whilst the other, with his wife and sister-in-law, can
+ cultivate the two combined shares of land. If, on the contrary a family
+ consists merely of one pair with their children, the man must either
+ remain at home&mdash;in which case he may have difficulty in finding work
+ for the whole of his time&mdash;or he must leave home, and entrust the
+ cultivation of his share of the land to his wife, whose time must be in
+ great part devoted to domestic affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the time of serfage the proprietors clearly perceived these and similar
+ advantages, and compelled their serfs to live together in large families.
+ No family could be broken up without the proprietor's consent, and this
+ consent was not easily obtained unless the family had assumed quite
+ abnormal proportions and was permanently disturbed by domestic dissension.
+ In the matrimonial affairs of the serfs, too, the majority of the
+ proprietors systematically exercised a certain supervision, not
+ necessarily from any paltry meddling spirit, but because their own
+ material interests were thereby affected. A proprietor would not, for
+ instance, allow the daughter of one of his serfs to marry a serf belonging
+ to another proprietor&mdash;because he would thereby lose a female
+ labourer&mdash;unless some compensation were offered. The compensation
+ might be a sum of money, or the affair might be arranged on the principle
+ of reciprocity by the master of the bridegroom allowing one of his female
+ serfs to marry a serf belonging to the master of the bride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However advantageous the custom of living in large families may appear
+ when regarded from the economic point of view, it has very serious
+ defects, both theoretical and practical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That families connected by the ties of blood-relationship and marriage can
+ easily live together in harmony is one of those social axioms which are
+ accepted universally and believed by nobody. We all know by our own
+ experience, or by that of others, that the friendly relations of two such
+ families are greatly endangered by proximity of habitation. To live in the
+ same street is not advisable; to occupy adjoining houses is positively
+ dangerous; and to live under the same roof is certainly fatal to prolonged
+ amity. There may be the very best intentions on both sides, and the
+ arrangement may be inaugurated by the most gushing expressions of undying
+ affection and by the discovery of innumerable secret affinities, but
+ neither affinities, affection, nor good intentions can withstand the
+ constant friction and occasional jerks which inevitably ensue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the reader must endeavour to realise that Russian peasants, even when
+ clad in sheep-skins, are human beings like ourselves. Though they are
+ often represented as abstract entities&mdash;as figures in a table of
+ statistics or dots on a diagram&mdash;they have in reality "organs,
+ dimensions, senses, affections, passions." If not exactly "fed with the
+ same food," they are at least "hurt with the same weapons, subject to the
+ same diseases, healed by the same means," and liable to be irritated by
+ the same annoyances as we are. And those of them who live in large
+ families are subjected to a kind of probation that most of us have never
+ dreamed of. The families comprising a large household not only live
+ together, but have nearly all things in common. Each member works, not for
+ himself, but for the household, and all that he earns is expected to go
+ into the family treasury. The arrangement almost inevitably leads to one
+ of two results&mdash;either there are continual dissensions, or order is
+ preserved by a powerful domestic tyranny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is quite natural, therefore, that when the authority of the landed
+ proprietors was abolished in 1861, the large peasant families almost all
+ crumbled to pieces. The arbitrary rule of the Khozain was based on, and
+ maintained by, the arbitrary rule of the proprietor, and both naturally
+ fell together. Households like that of our friend Ivan were preserved only
+ in exceptional cases, where the Head of the House happened to possess an
+ unusual amount of moral influence over the other members.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This change has unquestionably had a prejudicial influence on the material
+ welfare of the peasantry, but it must have added considerably to their
+ domestic comfort, and may perhaps produce good moral results. For the
+ present, however, the evil consequences are by far the most prominent.
+ Every married peasant strives to have a house of his own, and many of
+ them, in order to defray the necessary expenses, have been obliged to
+ contract debts. This is a very serious matter. Even if the peasants could
+ obtain money at five or six per cent., the position of the debtors would
+ be bad enough, but it is in reality much worse, for the village usurers
+ consider twenty or twenty-five per cent. a by no means exorbitant rate of
+ interest. A laudable attempt has been made to remedy this state of things
+ by village banks, but these have proved successful only in certain
+ exceptional localities. As a rule the peasant who contracts debts has a
+ hard struggle to pay the interest in ordinary times, and when some
+ misfortune overtakes him&mdash;when, for instance, the harvest is bad or
+ his horse is stolen&mdash;he probably falls hopelessly into pecuniary
+ embarrassments. I have seen peasants not specially addicted to drunkenness
+ or other ruinous habits sink to a helpless state of insolvency.
+ Fortunately for such insolvent debtors, they are treated by the law with
+ extreme leniency. Their house, their share of the common land, their
+ agricultural implements, their horse&mdash;in a word, all that is
+ necessary for their subsistence, is exempt from sequestration. The
+ Commune, however, may bring strong pressure to bear on those who do not
+ pay their taxes. When I lived among the peasantry in the seventies,
+ corporal punishment inflicted by order of the Commune was among the means
+ usually employed; and though the custom was recently prohibited by an
+ Imperial decree of Nicholas II, I am not at all sure that it has entirely
+ disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE PEASANTRY OF THE NORTH
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Communal Land&mdash;System of Agriculture&mdash;Parish Fetes&mdash;Fasting&mdash;Winter
+ Occupations&mdash;Yearly Migrations&mdash;Domestic Industries&mdash;Influence
+ of Capital and Wholesale Enterprise&mdash;The State Peasants&mdash;Serf-dues&mdash;Buckle's
+ "History of Civilisation"&mdash;A precocious Yamstchik&mdash;"People Who
+ Play Pranks"&mdash;A Midnight Alarm&mdash;The Far North.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ivanofka may be taken as a fair specimen of the villages in the northern
+ half of the country, and a brief description of its inhabitants will
+ convey a tolerably correct notion of the northern peasantry in general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nearly the whole of the female population, and about one-half of the male
+ inhabitants, are habitually engaged in cultivating the Communal land,
+ which comprises about two thousand acres of a light sandy soil. The arable
+ part of this land is divided into three large fields, each of which is cut
+ up into long narrow strips. The first field is reserved for the winter
+ grain&mdash;that is to say, rye, which forms, in the shape of black bread,
+ the principal food of the rural population. In the second are raised oats
+ for the horses, and buckwheat, which is largely used for food. The third
+ lies fallow, and is used in the summer as pasturage for the cattle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the villagers in this part of the country divide the arable land in
+ this way, in order to suit the triennial rotation of crops. This triennial
+ system is extremely simple. The field which is used this year for raising
+ winter grain will be used next year for raising summer grain, and in the
+ following year will lie fallow. Before being sown with winter grain it
+ ought to receive a certain amount of manure. Every family possesses in
+ each of the two fields under cultivation one or more of the long narrow
+ strips or belts into which they are divided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The annual life of the peasantry is that of simple husbandman, inhabiting
+ a country where the winter is long and severe. The agricultural year
+ begins in April with the melting of the snow. Nature has been lying
+ dormant for some months. Awaking now from her long sleep, and throwing off
+ her white mantle, she strives to make up for lost time. No sooner has the
+ snow disappeared than the fresh young grass begins to shoot up, and very
+ soon afterwards the shrubs and trees begin to bud. The rapidity of this
+ transition from winter to spring astonishes the inhabitants of more
+ temperate climes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On St. George's Day (April 23rd*) the cattle are brought out for the first
+ time, and sprinkled with holy water by the priest. They are never very
+ fat, but at this period of the year their appearance is truly lamentable.
+ During the winter they have been cooped up in small unventilated
+ cow-houses, and fed almost exclusively on straw; now, when they are
+ released from their imprisonment, they look like the ghosts of their
+ former emaciated selves. All are lean and weak, many are lame, and some
+ cannot rise to their feet without assistance.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * With regard to saints' days, I always give the date
+ according to the old style. To find the date according to
+ our calendar, thirteen days must be added.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the peasants are impatient to begin the field labour. An old
+ proverb which they all know says: "Sow in mud and you will be a prince";
+ and they always act in accordance with this dictate of traditional wisdom.
+ As soon as it is possible to plough they begin to prepare the land for the
+ summer grain, and this labour occupies them probably till the end of May.
+ Then comes the work of carting out manure and preparing the fallow field
+ for the winter grain, which will last probably till about St. Peter's Day
+ (June 29th), when the hay-making generally begins. After the hay-making
+ comes the harvest, by far the busiest time of the year. From the middle of
+ July&mdash;especially from St. Elijah's Day (July 20th), when the saint is
+ usually heard rumbling along the heavens in his chariot of fire*&mdash;until
+ the end of August, the peasant may work day and night, and yet he will
+ find that he has barely time to get all his work done. In little more than
+ a month he has to reap and stack his grain&mdash;rye, oats, and whatever
+ else he may have sown either in spring or in the preceding autumn&mdash;and
+ to sow the winter grain for next year. To add to his troubles, it
+ sometimes happens that the rye and the oats ripen almost simultaneously,
+ and his position is then still more difficult.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * It is thus that the peasants explain the thunder, which is
+ often heard at that season.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whether the seasons favour him or not, the peasant has at this time a hard
+ task, for he can rarely afford to hire the requisite number of labourers,
+ and has generally the assistance merely of his wife and family; but he can
+ at this season work for a short time at high pressure, for he has the
+ prospect of soon obtaining a good rest and an abundance of food. About the
+ end of September the field labour is finished, and on the first day of
+ October the harvest festival begins&mdash;a joyous season, during which
+ the parish fetes are commonly celebrated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To celebrate a parish fete in true orthodox fashion it is necessary to
+ prepare beforehand a large quantity of braga&mdash;a kind of home-brewed
+ small beer&mdash;and to bake a plentiful supply of piroghi or meat pies.
+ Oil, too, has to be procured, and vodka (rye spirit) in goodly quantity.
+ At the same time the big room of the izba, as the peasant's house is
+ called, has to be cleared, the floor washed, and the table and benches
+ scrubbed. The evening before the fete, while the piroghi are being baked,
+ a little lamp burns before the Icon in the corner of the room, and perhaps
+ one or two guests from a distance arrive in order that they may have on
+ the morrow a full day's enjoyment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morning of the fete the proceedings begin by a long service in the
+ church, at which all the inhabitants are present in their best holiday
+ costumes, except those matrons and young women who remain at home to
+ prepare the dinner. About mid-day dinner is served in each izba for the
+ family and their friends. In general the Russian peasant's fare is of the
+ simplest kind, and rarely comprises animal food of any sort&mdash;not from
+ any vegetarian proclivities, but merely because beef, mutton, and pork are
+ too expensive; but on a holiday, such as a parish fete, there is always on
+ the dinner table a considerable variety of dishes. In the house of a
+ well-to-do family there will be not only greasy cabbage-soup and kasha&mdash;a
+ dish made from buckwheat&mdash;but also pork, mutton, and perhaps even
+ beef. Braga will be supplied in unlimited quantities, and more than once
+ vodka will be handed round. When the repast is finished, all rise
+ together, and, turning towards the Icon in the corner, bow and cross
+ themselves repeatedly. The guests then say to their host, "Spasibo za
+ khelb za sol"&mdash;that is to say, "Thanks for your hospitality," or more
+ literally, "Thanks for bread and salt"; and the host replies, "Do not be
+ displeased, sit down once more for good luck"&mdash;or perhaps he puts the
+ last part of his request into the form of a rhyming couplet to the
+ following effect: "Sit down, that the hens may brood, and that the
+ chickens and bees may multiply!" All obey this request, and there is
+ another round of vodka.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After dinner some stroll about, chatting with their friends, or go to
+ sleep in some shady nook, whilst those who wish to make merry go to the
+ spot where the young people are singing, playing, and amusing themselves
+ in various ways. As the sun sinks towards the horizon, the more grave,
+ staid guests wend their way homewards, but many remain for supper; and as
+ evening advances the effects of the vodka become more and more apparent.
+ Sounds of revelry are heard more frequently from the houses, and a large
+ proportion of the inhabitants and guests appear on the road in various
+ degrees of intoxication. Some of these vow eternal affection to their
+ friends, or with flaccid gestures and in incoherent tones harangue
+ invisible audiences; others stagger about aimlessly in besotted
+ self-contentment, till they drop down in a state of complete
+ unconsciousness. There they will lie tranquilly till they are picked up by
+ their less intoxicated friends, or more probably till they awake of their
+ own accord next morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a whole, a village fete in Russia is a saddening spectacle. It affords
+ a new proof&mdash;where, alas! no new proof was required&mdash;that we
+ northern nations, who know so well how to work, have not yet learned the
+ art of amusing ourselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Russian peasant's food were always as good and plentiful as at this
+ season of the year, he would have little reason to complain; but this is
+ by no means the case. Gradually, as the harvest-time recedes, it
+ deteriorates in quality, and sometimes diminishes in quantity. Besides
+ this, during a great part of the year the peasant is prevented, by the
+ rules of the Church, from using much that he possesses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In southern climes, where these rules were elaborated and first practised,
+ the prescribed fasts are perhaps useful not only in a religious, but also
+ in a sanitary sense. Having abundance of fruit and vegetables, the
+ inhabitants do well to abstain occasionally from animal food. But in
+ countries like Northern and Central Russia the influence of these rules is
+ very different. The Russian peasant cannot get as much animal food as he
+ requires, whilst sour cabbage and cucumbers are probably the only
+ vegetables he can procure, and fruit of any kind is for him an
+ unattainable luxury. Under these circumstances, abstinence from eggs and
+ milk in all their forms during several months of the year seems to the
+ secular mind a superfluous bit of asceticism. If the Church would direct
+ her maternal solicitude to the peasant's drinking, and leave him to eat
+ what he pleases, she might exercise a beneficial influence on his material
+ and moral welfare. Unfortunately she has a great deal too much inherent
+ immobility to attempt anything of the kind, so the muzhik, while free to
+ drink copiously whenever he gets the chance, must fast during the seven
+ weeks of Lent, during two or three weeks in June, from the beginning of
+ November till Christmas, and on all Wednesdays and Fridays during the
+ remainder of the year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the festival time till the following spring there is no possibility
+ of doing any agricultural work, for the ground is hard as iron, and
+ covered with a deep layer of snow. The male peasants, therefore, who
+ remain in the villages, have very little to do, and may spend the greater
+ part of their time in lying idly on the stove, unless they happen to have
+ learned some handicraft that can be practised at home. Formerly, many of
+ them were employed in transporting the grain to the market town, which
+ might be several hundred miles distant; but now this species of occupation
+ has been greatly diminished by the extension of railways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another winter occupation which was formerly practised, and has now almost
+ fallen into disuse, was that of stealing wood in the forest. This was,
+ according to peasant morality, no sin, or at most a very venial offence,
+ for God plants and waters the trees, and therefore forests belong properly
+ to no one. So thought the peasantry, but the landed proprietors and the
+ Administration of the Domains held a different theory of property, and
+ consequently precautions had to be taken to avoid detection. In order to
+ ensure success it was necessary to choose a night when there was a violent
+ snowstorm, which would immediately obliterate all traces of the
+ expedition; and when such a night was found, the operation was commonly
+ performed with success. During the hours of darkness a tree would be
+ felled, stripped of its branches, dragged into the village, and cut up
+ into firewood, and at sunrise the actors would be tranquilly sleeping on
+ the stove as if they had spent the night at home. In recent years the
+ judicial authorities have done much towards putting down this practice and
+ eradicating the loose conceptions of property with which it was connected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the female part of the population the winter used to be a busy time,
+ for it was during these four or five months that the spinning and weaving
+ had to be done, but now the big factories, with their cheap methods of
+ production, are rapidly killing the home industries, and the young girls
+ are not learning to work at the jenny and the loom as their mothers and
+ grandmothers did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In many of the northern villages, where ancient usages happen to be
+ preserved, the tedium of the long winter evenings is relieved by so-called
+ Besedy, a word which signifies literally conversazioni. A Beseda, however,
+ is not exactly a conversazione as we understand the term, but resembles
+ rather what is by some ladies called a Dorcas meeting, with this essential
+ difference, that those present work for themselves and not for any
+ benevolent purposes. In some villages as many as three Besedy regularly
+ assemble about sunset; one for the children, the second for the young
+ people, and the third for the matrons. Each of the three has its peculiar
+ character. In the first, the children work and amuse themselves under the
+ superintendence of an old woman, who trims the torch* and endeavours to
+ keep order. The little girls spin flax in a primitive way without the aid
+ of a jenny, and the boys, who are, on the whole, much less industrious,
+ make simple bits of wicker-work. Formerly&mdash;I mean within my own
+ recollection&mdash;many of them used to make rude shoes of plaited bark,
+ called lapty, but these are being rapidly supplanted by leather boots.
+ These occupations do not prevent an almost incessant hum of talk, frequent
+ discordant attempts to sing in chorus, and occasional quarrels requiring
+ the energetic interference of the old woman who controls the proceedings.
+ To amuse her noisy flock she sometimes relates to them, for the hundredth
+ time, one of those wonderful old stories that lose nothing by repetition,
+ and all listen to her attentively, as if they had never heard the story
+ before.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The torch (lutchina) has now almost entirely disappeared
+ and been replaced by the petroleum lamp.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The second Beseda is held in another house by the young people of a riper
+ age. Here the workers are naturally more staid, less given to quarrelling,
+ sing more in harmony, and require no one to look after them. Some people,
+ however, might think that a chaperon or inspector of some kind would be by
+ no means out of place, for a good deal of flirtation goes on, and if
+ village scandal is to be trusted, strict propriety in thought, word, and
+ deed is not always observed. How far these reports are true I cannot
+ pretend to say, for the presence of a stranger always acts on the company
+ like the presence of a severe inspector. In the third Beseda there is
+ always at least strict decorum. Here the married women work together and
+ talk about their domestic concerns, enlivening the conversation
+ occasionally by the introduction of little bits of village scandal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such is the ordinary life of the peasants who live by agriculture; but
+ many of the villagers live occasionally or permanently in the towns.
+ Probably the majority of the peasants in this region have at some period
+ of their lives gained a living elsewhere. Many of the absentees spend
+ yearly a few months at home, whilst others visit their families only
+ occasionally, and, it may be, at long intervals. In no case, however, do
+ they sever their connection with their native village. Even the peasant
+ who becomes a rich merchant and settles permanently with his family in
+ Moscow or St. Petersburg remains probably a member of the Village Commune,
+ and pays his share of the taxes, though he does not enjoy any of the
+ corresponding privileges. Once I remember asking a rich man of this kind,
+ the proprietor of several large houses in St. Petersburg, why he did not
+ free himself from all connection with his native Commune, with which he
+ had no longer any interests in common. His answer was, "It is all very
+ well to be free, and I don't want anything from the Commune now; but my
+ old father lives there, my mother is buried there, and I like to go back
+ to the old place sometimes. Besides, I have children, and our affairs are
+ commercial (nashe dyelo torgovoe). Who knows but my children may be very
+ glad some day to have a share of the Commune land?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In respect to these non-agricultural occupations, each district has its
+ specialty. The province of Yaroslavl, for instance, supplies the large
+ towns with waiters for the traktirs, or lower class of restaurants, whilst
+ the best hotels in Petersburg are supplied by the Tartars of Kasimof,
+ celebrated for their sobriety and honesty. One part of the province of
+ Kostroma has a special reputation for producing carpenters and
+ stove-builders, whilst another part, as I once discovered to my surprise,
+ sends yearly to Siberia&mdash;not as convicts, but as free laborours&mdash;a
+ large contingent of tailors and workers in felt! On questioning some
+ youngsters who were accompanying as apprentices one of these bands, I was
+ informed by a bright-eyed youth of about sixteen that he had already made
+ the journey twice, and intended to go every winter. "And you always bring
+ home a big pile of money with you?" I inquired. "Nitchevo!" replied the
+ little fellow, gaily, with an air of pride and self-confidence; "last year
+ I brought home three roubles!" This answer was, at the moment, not
+ altogether welcome, for I had just been discussing with a Russian
+ fellow-traveller as to whether the peasantry can fairly be called
+ industrious, and the boy's reply enabled my antagonist to score a point
+ against me. "You hear that!" he said, triumphantly. "A Russian peasant
+ goes all the way to Siberia and back for three roubles! Could you get an
+ Englishman to work at that rate?" "Perhaps not," I replied, evasively,
+ thinking at the same time that if a youth were sent several times from
+ Land's End to John o' Groat's House, and obliged to make the greater part
+ of the journey in carts or on foot, he would probably expect, by way of
+ remuneration for the time and labour expended, rather more than seven and
+ sixpence!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very often the peasants find industrial occupations without leaving home,
+ for various industries which do not require complicated machinery are
+ practised in the villages by the peasants and their families. Wooden
+ vessels, wrought iron, pottery, leather, rush-matting, and numerous other
+ articles are thus produced in enormous quantities. Occasionally we find
+ not only a whole village, but even a whole district occupied almost
+ exclusively with some one kind of manual industry. In the province of
+ Vladimir, for example, a large group of villages live by Icon-painting; in
+ one locality near Nizhni-Novgorod nineteen villages are occupied with the
+ manufacture of axes; round about Pavlovo, in the same province, eighty
+ villages produce almost nothing but cutlery; and in a locality called
+ Ouloma, on the borders of Novgorod and Tver, no less than two hundred
+ villages live by nail-making.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These domestic industries have long existed, and were formerly an abundant
+ source of revenue&mdash;providing a certain compensation for the poverty
+ of the soil. But at present they are in a very critical position. They
+ belong to the primitive period of economic development, and that period in
+ Russia, as I shall explain in a future chapter, is now rapidly drawing to
+ a close. Formerly the Head of a Household bought the raw material, had it
+ worked up at home, and sold with a reasonable profit the manufactured
+ articles at the bazaars, as the local fairs are called, or perhaps at the
+ great annual yarmarkt* of Nizhni-Novgorod. This primitive system is now
+ rapidly becoming obsolete. Capital and wholesale enterprise have come into
+ the field and are revolutionising the old methods of production and trade.
+ Already whole groups of industrial villages have fallen under the power of
+ middle-men, who advance money to the working households and fix the price
+ of the products. Attempts are frequently made to break their power by
+ voluntary co-operative associations, organised by the local authorities or
+ benevolent landed proprietors of the neighbourhood&mdash;like the
+ benevolent people in England who try to preserve the traditional cottage
+ industries&mdash;and some of the associations work very well; but the
+ ultimate success of such "efforts to stem the current of capitalism" is
+ extremely doubtful. At the same time, the periodical bazaars and yarmarki,
+ at which producers and consumers transacted their affairs without
+ mediation, are being replaced by permanent stores and by various classes
+ of tradesmen&mdash;wholesale and retail.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This term is a corruption of the German word Jahrmarkt.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ To the political economist of the rigidly orthodox school this important
+ change may afford great satisfaction. According to his theories it is a
+ gigantic step in the right direction, and must necessarily redound to the
+ advantage of all parties concerned. The producer now receives a regular
+ supply of raw material, and regularly disposes of the articles
+ manufactured; and the time and trouble which he formerly devoted to
+ wandering about in search of customers he can now employ more profitably
+ in productive work. The creation of a class between the producers and the
+ consumers is an important step towards that division and specialisation of
+ labour which is a necessary condition of industrial and commercial
+ prosperity. The consumer no longer requires to go on a fixed day to some
+ distant point, on the chance of finding there what he requires, but can
+ always buy what he pleases in the permanent stores. Above all, the
+ production is greatly increased in amount, and the price of manufactured
+ goods is proportionally lessened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this seems clear enough in theory, and any one who values intellectual
+ tranquillity will feel disposed to accept this view of the case without
+ questioning its accuracy; but the unfortunate traveller who is obliged to
+ use his eyes as well as his logical faculties may find some little
+ difficulty in making the facts fit into the a priori formula. Far be it
+ from me to question the wisdom of political economists, but I cannot
+ refrain from remarking that of the three classes concerned&mdash;small
+ producers, middle-men, and consumers&mdash;two fail to perceive and
+ appreciate the benefits which have been conferred upon them. The small
+ producers complain that on the new system they work more and gain less;
+ and the consumers complain that the manufactured articles, if cheaper and
+ more showy in appearance, are far inferior in quality. The middlemen, who
+ are accused, rightly or wrongly, of taking for themselves the lion's share
+ of the profits, alone seem satisfied with the new arrangement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Interesting as this question undoubtedly is, it is not of permanent
+ importance, because the present state of things is merely transitory.
+ Though the peasants may continue for a time to work at home for the
+ wholesale dealers, they cannot in the long run compete with the big
+ factories and workshops, organised on the European model with steam-power
+ and complicated machinery, which already exist in many provinces. Once a
+ country has begun to move forward on the great highway of economic
+ progress, there is no possibility of stopping halfway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here again the orthodox economists find reason for congratulation, because
+ big factories and workshops are the cheapest and most productive form of
+ manufacturing industry; and again, the observant traveller cannot shut his
+ eyes to ugly facts which force themselves on his attention. He notices
+ that this cheapest and most productive form of manufacturing industry does
+ not seem to advance the material and moral welfare of the population.
+ Nowhere is there more disease, drunkenness, demoralisation and misery than
+ in the manufacturing districts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader must not imagine that in making these statements I wish to
+ calumniate the spirit of modern enterprise, or to advocate a return to
+ primitive barbarism. All great changes produce a mixture of good and evil,
+ and at first the evil is pretty sure to come prominently forward. Russia
+ is at this moment in a state of transition, and the new condition of
+ things is not yet properly organised. With improved organisation many of
+ the existing evils will disappear. Already in recent years I have noticed
+ sporadic signs of improvement. When factories were first established no
+ proper arrangements were made for housing and feeding the workmen, and the
+ consequent hardships were specially felt when the factories were founded,
+ as is often the case, in rural districts. Now, the richer and more
+ enterprising manufacturers build large barracks for the workmen and their
+ families, and provide them with common kitchens, wash-houses, steam-baths,
+ schools, and similar requisites of civilised life. At the same time the
+ Government appoints inspectors to superintend the sanitary arrangements
+ and see that the health and comfort of the workers are properly attended
+ to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the whole we must assume that the activity of these inspectors tends to
+ improve the condition of the working-classes. Certainly in some instances
+ it has that effect. I remember, for example, some thirty years ago,
+ visiting a lucifer-match factory in which the hands employed worked
+ habitually in an atmosphere impregnated with the fumes of phosphorus,
+ which produce insidious and very painful diseases. Such a thing is hardly
+ possible nowadays. On the other hand, official inspection, like Factory
+ Acts, everywhere gives rise to a good deal of dissatisfaction and does not
+ always improve the relations between employers and employed. Some of the
+ Russian inspectors, if I may credit the testimony of employers, are young
+ gentlemen imbued with socialist notions, who intentionally stir up
+ discontent or who make mischief from inexperience. An amusing illustration
+ of the current complaints came under my notice when, in 1903, I was
+ visiting a landed proprietor of the southern provinces, who has a large
+ sugar factory on his estate. The inspector objected to the traditional
+ custom of the men sleeping in large dormitories and insisted on
+ sleeping-cots being constructed for them individually. As soon as the
+ change was made the workmen came to the proprietor to complain, and put
+ their grievance in an interrogative form: "Are we cattle that we should be
+ thus couped up in stalls?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To return to the northern agricultural region, the rural population have a
+ peculiar type, which is to be accounted for by the fact that they never
+ experienced to its full extent the demoralising influence of serfage. A
+ large proportion of them were settled on State domains and were governed
+ by a special branch of the Imperial administration, whilst others lived on
+ the estates of rich absentee landlords, who were in the habit of leaving
+ the management of their properties to a steward acting under a code of
+ instructions. In either case, though serfs in the eye of the law, they
+ enjoyed practically a very large amount of liberty. By paying a small sum
+ for a passport they could leave their villages for an indefinite period,
+ and as long as they sent home regularly the money required for taxes and
+ dues, they were in little danger of being molested. Many of them, though
+ officially inscribed as domiciled in their native communes, lived
+ permanently in the towns, and not a few succeeded in amassing large
+ fortunes. The effect of this comparative freedom is apparent even at the
+ present day. These peasants of the north are more energetic, more
+ intelligent, more independent, and consequently less docile and pliable
+ than those of the fertile central provinces. They have, too, more
+ education. A large proportion of them can read and write, and occasionally
+ one meets among them men who have a keen desire for knowledge. Several
+ times I encountered peasants in this region who had a small collection of
+ books, and twice I found in such collections, much to my astonishment, a
+ Russian translation of Buckle's "History of Civilisation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How, it may be asked, did a work of this sort find its way to such a
+ place? If the reader will pardon a short digression, I shall explain the
+ fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Immediately after the Crimean War there was a curious intellectual
+ movement&mdash;of which I shall have more to say hereafter&mdash;among the
+ Russian educated classes. The movement assumed various forms, of which two
+ of the most prominent were a desire for encyclopaedic knowledge, and an
+ attempt to reduce all knowledge to a scientific form. For men in this
+ state of mind Buckle's great work had naturally a powerful fascination. It
+ seemed at first sight to reduce the multifarious conflicting facts of
+ human history to a few simple principles, and to evolve order out of
+ chaos. Its success, therefore, was great. In the course of a few years no
+ less than four independent translations were published and sold. Every one
+ read, or at least professed to have read, the wonderful book, and many
+ believed that its author was the greatest genius of his time. During the
+ first year of my residence in Russia (1870), I rarely had a serious
+ conversation without hearing Buckle's name mentioned; and my friends
+ almost always assumed that he had succeeded in creating a genuine science
+ of history on the inductive method. In vain I pointed out that Buckle had
+ merely thrown out some hints in his introductory chapter as to how such a
+ science ought to be constructed, and that he had himself made no serious
+ attempt to use the method which he commended. My objections had little or
+ no effect: the belief was too deep-rooted to be so easily eradicated. In
+ books, periodicals, newspapers, and professional lectures the name of
+ Buckle was constantly cited&mdash;often violently dragged in without the
+ slightest reason&mdash;and the cheap translations of his work were sold in
+ enormous quantities. It is not, then, so very wonderful after all that the
+ book should have found its way to two villages in the province of
+ Yaroslavl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The enterprising, self-reliant, independent spirit which is often to be
+ found among those peasants manifests itself occasionally in amusing forms
+ among the young generation. Often in this part of the country I have
+ encountered boys who recalled young America rather than young Russia. One
+ of these young hopefuls I remember well. I was waiting at a post-station
+ for the horses to be changed, when he appeared before me in a sheep-skin,
+ fur cap, and gigantic double-soled boots&mdash;all of which articles had
+ been made on a scale adapted to future rather than actual requirements. He
+ must have stood in his boots about three feet eight inches, and he could
+ not have been more than twelve years of age; but he had already learned to
+ look upon life as a serious business, wore a commanding air, and knitted
+ his innocent little brows as if the cares of an empire weighed on his
+ diminutive shoulders. Though he was to act as yamstchik he had to leave
+ the putting in of the horses to larger specimens of the human species, but
+ he took care that all was done properly. Putting one of his big boots a
+ little in advance, and drawing himself up to his full shortness, he
+ watched the operation attentively, as if the smallness of his stature had
+ nothing to do with his inactivity. When all was ready, he climbed up to
+ his seat, and at a signal from the station-keeper, who watched with
+ paternal pride all the movements of the little prodigy, we dashed off at a
+ pace rarely attained by post-horses. He had the faculty of emitting a
+ peculiar sound&mdash;something between a whirr and a whistle&mdash;that
+ appeared to have a magical effect on the team and every few minutes he
+ employed this incentive. The road was rough, and at every jolt he was shot
+ upwards into the air, but he always fell back into his proper position,
+ and never lost for a moment his self-possession or his balance. At the end
+ of the journey I found we had made nearly fourteen miles within the hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately this energetic, enterprising spirit sometimes takes an
+ illegitimate direction. Not only whole villages, but even whole districts,
+ have in this way acquired a bad reputation for robbery, the manufacture of
+ paper-money, and similar offences against the criminal law. In popular
+ parlance, these localities are said to contain "people who play pranks"
+ (narod shalit). I must, however, remark that, if I may judge by my own
+ experience, these so-called "playful" tendencies are greatly exaggerated.
+ Though I have travelled hundreds of miles at night on lonely roads, I was
+ never robbed or in any way molested. Once, indeed, when travelling at
+ night in a tarantass, I discovered on awaking that my driver was bending
+ over me, and had introduced his hand into one of my pockets; but the
+ incident ended without serious consequences. When I caught the delinquent
+ hand, and demanded an explanation from the owner, he replied, in an
+ apologetic, caressing tone, that the night was cold, and he wished to warm
+ his fingers; and when I advised him to use for that purpose his own
+ pockets rather than mine, he promised to act in future according to my
+ advice. More than once, it is true, I believed that I was in danger of
+ being attacked, but on every occasion my fears turned out to be unfounded,
+ and sometimes the catastrophe was ludicrous rather than tragical. Let the
+ following serve as an illustration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had occasion to traverse, in company with a Russian friend, the country
+ lying to the east of the river Vetluga&mdash;a land of forest and morass,
+ with here and there a patch of cultivation. The majority of the population
+ are Tcheremiss, a Finnish tribe; but near the banks of the river there are
+ villages of Russian peasants, and these latter have the reputation of
+ "playing pranks." When we were on the point of starting from Kozmodemiansk
+ a town on the bank of the Volga, we received a visit from an officer of
+ rural police, who painted in very sombre colours the habits and moral
+ character&mdash;or, more properly, immoral character&mdash;of the people
+ whose acquaintance we were about to make. He related with melodramatic
+ gesticulation his encounters with malefactors belonging to the villages
+ through which we had to pass, and ended the interview with a strong
+ recommendation to us not to travel at night, and to keep at all times our
+ eyes open and our revolver ready. The effect of his narrative was
+ considerably diminished by the prominence of the moral, which was to the
+ effect that there never had been a police-officer who had shown so much
+ zeal, energy, and courage in the discharge of his duty as the worthy man
+ before us. We considered it, however, advisable to remember his hint about
+ keeping our eyes open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of our intention of being very cautious, it was already dark when
+ we arrived at the village which was to be our halting-place for the night,
+ and it seemed at first as if we should be obliged to spend the night in
+ the open air. The inhabitants had already retired to rest, and refused to
+ open their doors to unknown travellers. At length an old woman, more
+ hospitable than her neighbours, or more anxious to earn an honest penny,
+ consented to let us pass the night in an outer apartment (seni), and this
+ permission we gladly accepted. Mindful of the warnings of the police
+ officer, we barricaded the two doors and the window, and the precaution
+ was evidently not superfluous, for almost as soon as the light was
+ extinguished we could hear that an attempt was being made stealthily to
+ effect an entrance. Notwithstanding my efforts to remain awake, and on the
+ watch, I at last fell asleep, and was suddenly aroused by some one
+ grasping me tightly by the arm. Instantly I sprang to my feet and
+ endeavoured to close with my invisible assailant. In vain! He dexterously
+ eluded my grasp, and I stumbled over my portmanteau, which was lying on
+ the floor; but my prompt action revealed who the intruder was, by
+ producing a wild flutter and a frantic cackling! Before my companion could
+ strike a light the mysterious attack was fully explained. The supposed
+ midnight robber and possible assassin was simply a peaceable hen that had
+ gone to roost on my arm, and, on finding her position unsteady, had dug
+ her claws into what she mistook for a roosting-pole!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When speaking of the peasantry of the north I have hitherto had in view
+ the inhabitants of the provinces of Old-Novgorod, Tver, Yaroslavl,
+ Nizhni-Novgorod, Kostroma, Kazan, and Viatka, and I have founded my
+ remarks chiefly on information collected on the spot. Beyond this lies
+ what may be called the Far North. Though I cannot profess to have the same
+ personal acquaintance with the peasantry of that region, I may perhaps be
+ allowed to insert here some information regarding them which I collected
+ from various trustworthy sources.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we draw a wavy line eastward from a point a little to the north of St.
+ Petersburg, as is shown in the map facing page 1 of this volume, we shall
+ have between that line and the Polar Ocean what may be regarded as a
+ distinct, peculiar region, differing in many respects from the rest of
+ Russia. Throughout the whole of it the climate is very severe. For about
+ half of the year the ground is covered by deep snow, and the rivers are
+ frozen. By far the greater part of the land is occupied by forests of
+ pine, fir, larch, and birch, or by vast, unfathomable morasses. The arable
+ land and pasturage taken together form only about one and a half per cent,
+ of the area. The population is scarce&mdash;little more than one to the
+ English square mile&mdash;and settled chiefly along the banks of the
+ rivers. The peasantry support themselves by fishing, hunting, felling and
+ floating timber, preparing tar and charcoal, cattle-breeding, and, in the
+ extreme north, breeding reindeer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These are their chief occupations, but the people do not entirely neglect
+ agriculture. They make the most of their short summer by means of a
+ peculiar and ingenious mode of farming, well adapted to the peculiar local
+ conditions. The peasant knows of course nothing about agronomical
+ chemistry, but he, as well as his forefathers, have observed that if wood
+ be burnt on a field, and the ashes be mixed with the soil, a good harvest
+ may be confidently expected. On this simple principle his system of
+ farming is based. When spring comes round and the leaves begin to appear
+ on the trees, a band of peasants, armed with their hatchets, proceed to
+ some spot in the woods previously fixed upon. Here they begin to make a
+ clearing. This is no easy matter, for tree-felling is hard and tedious
+ work; but the process does not take so much time as might be expected, for
+ the workmen have been brought up to the trade, and wield their axes with
+ marvellous dexterity. When they have felled all the trees, great and
+ small, they return to their homes, and think no more about their clearing
+ till the autumn, when they return, in order to strip the fallen trees of
+ the branches, to pick out what they require for building purposes or
+ firewood, and to pile up the remainder in heaps. The logs for building or
+ firewood are dragged away by horses as soon as the first fall of snow has
+ made a good slippery road, but the piles are allowed to remain till the
+ following spring, when they are stirred up with long poles and ignited.
+ The flames rapidly spread in all directions till they join together and
+ form a gigantic bonfire, such as is never seen in more densely-populated
+ countries. If the fire does its work properly, the whole of the space is
+ covered with a layer of ashes; and when these have been slightly mixed
+ with soil by means of a light plough, the seed is sown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the field prepared in this original fashion is sown barley, rye, or
+ flax, and the harvests, nearly always good, sometimes border on the
+ miraculous. Barley or rye may be expected to produce about sixfold in
+ ordinary years, and they may produce as much as thirty-fold under
+ peculiarly favourable circumstances. The fertility is, however,
+ short-lived. If the soil is poor and stony, not more than two crops can be
+ raised; if it is of a better quality, it may give tolerable harvests for
+ six or seven successive years. In most countries this would be an absurdly
+ expensive way of manuring, for wood is much too valuable a commodity to be
+ used for such a purpose; but in this northern region the forests are
+ boundless, and in the districts where there is no river or stream by which
+ timber may be floated, the trees not used in this way rot from old age.
+ Under these circumstances the system is reasonable, but it must be
+ admitted that it does not give a very large return for the amount of
+ labour expended, and in bad seasons it gives almost no return at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other sources of revenue are scarcely less precarious. With his gun
+ and a little parcel of provisions the peasant wanders about in the
+ trackless forests, and too often returns after many days with a very light
+ bag; or he starts in autumn for some distant lake, and comes back after
+ five or six weeks with nothing better than perch and pike. Sometimes he
+ tries his luck at deep-sea fishing. In this case he starts in February&mdash;probably
+ on foot&mdash;for Kem, on the shore of the White Sea, or perhaps for the
+ more distant Kola, situated on a small river which falls into the Arctic
+ Ocean. There, in company with three or four comrades, he starts on a
+ fishing cruise along the Murman coast, or, it may be, off the coast of
+ Spitzbergen. His gains will depend on the amount caught, for it is a
+ joint-venture; but in no case can they be very great, for three-fourths of
+ the fish brought into port belongs to the owner of the craft and tackle.
+ Of the sum realised, he brings home perhaps only a small part, for he has
+ a strong temptation to buy rum, tea, and other luxuries, which are very
+ dear in those northern latitudes. If the fishing is good and he resists
+ temptation, he may save as much as 100 roubles&mdash;about 10 pounds&mdash;and
+ thereby live comfortably all winter; but if the fishing season is bad, he
+ may find himself at the end of it not only with empty pockets, but in debt
+ to the owner of the boat. This debt he may pay off, if he has a horse, by
+ transporting the dried fish to Kargopol, St. Petersburg, or some other
+ market.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is here in the Far North that the ancient folk-lore&mdash;popular
+ songs, stories, and fragments of epic poetry&mdash;has been best
+ preserved; but this is a field on which I need not enter, for the reader
+ can easily find all that he may desire to know on the subject in the
+ brilliant writings of M. Rambaud and the very interesting, conscientious
+ works of the late Mr. Ralston,* which enjoy a high reputation in Russia.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Rambaud, "La Russie Epique," Paris, 1876; Ralston, "The
+ Songs of the Russian People," London, 1872; and "Russian
+ Folk-tales," London, 1873.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE MIR, OR VILLAGE COMMUNITY
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Social and Political Importance of the Mir&mdash;The Mir and the Family
+ Compared&mdash;Theory of the Communal System&mdash;Practical Deviations
+ from the Theory&mdash;The Mir a Good Specimen of Constitutional Government
+ of the Extreme Democratic Type&mdash;The Village Assembly&mdash;Female
+ Members&mdash;The Elections&mdash;Distribution of the Communal Land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I had gained a clear notion of the family-life and occupations of the
+ peasantry, I turned my attention to the constitution of the village. This
+ was a subject which specially interested me, because I was aware that the
+ Mir is the most peculiar of Russian institutions. Long before visiting
+ Russia I had looked into Haxthausen's celebrated work, by which the
+ peculiarities of the Russian village system were first made known to
+ Western Europe, and during my stay in St. Petersburg I had often been
+ informed by intelligent, educated Russians that the rural Commune
+ presented a practical solution of many difficult social problems with
+ which the philosophers and statesmen of the West had long been vainly
+ struggling. "The nations of the West"&mdash;such was the substance of
+ innumerable discourses which I had heard&mdash;"are at present on the
+ high-road to political and social anarchy, and England has the unenviable
+ distinction of being foremost in the race. The natural increase of
+ population, together with the expropriation of the small landholders by
+ the great landed proprietors, has created a dangerous and ever-increasing
+ Proletariat&mdash;a great disorganised mass of human beings, without
+ homes, without permanent domicile, without property of any kind, without
+ any stake in the existing institutions. Part of these gain a miserable
+ pittance as agricultural labourers, and live in a condition infinitely
+ worse than serfage. The others have been forever uprooted from the soil,
+ and have collected in the large towns, where they earn a precarious living
+ in the factories and workshops, or swell the ranks of the criminal
+ classes. In England you have no longer a peasantry in the proper sense of
+ the term, and unless some radical measures be very soon adopted, you will
+ never be able to create such a class, for men who have been long exposed
+ to the unwholesome influences of town life are physically and morally
+ incapable of becoming agriculturists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hitherto," the disquisition proceeded, "England has enjoyed, in
+ consequence of her geographical position, her political freedom, and her
+ vast natural deposits of coal and iron, a wholly exceptional position in
+ the industrial world. Fearing no competition, she has proclaimed the
+ principles of Free Trade, and has inundated the world with her
+ manufactures&mdash;using unscrupulously her powerful navy and all the
+ other forces at her command for breaking down every barrier tending to
+ check the flood sent forth from Manchester and Birmingham. In that way her
+ hungry Proletariat has been fed. But the industrial supremacy of England
+ is drawing to a close. The nations have discovered the perfidious fallacy
+ of Free-Trade principles, and are now learning to manufacture for their
+ own wants, instead of paying England enormous sums to manufacture for
+ them. Very soon English goods will no longer find foreign markets, and how
+ will the hungry Proletariat then be fed? Already the grain production of
+ England is far from sufficient for the wants of the population, so that,
+ even when the harvest is exceptionally abundant, enormous quantities of
+ wheat are imported from all quarters of the globe. Hitherto this grain has
+ been paid for by the manufactured goods annually exported, but how will it
+ be procured when these goods are no longer wanted by foreign consumers?
+ And what then will the hungry Proletariat do?"*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This passage was written, precisely as it stands, long
+ before the fiscal question was raised by Mr. Chamberlain.
+ It will be found in the first edition of this work,
+ published in 1877. (Vol. I., pp. 179-81.)
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This sombre picture of England's future had often been presented to me,
+ and on nearly every occasion I had been assured that Russia had been saved
+ from these terrible evils by the rural Commune&mdash;an institution which,
+ in spite of its simplicity and incalculable utility, West Europeans seemed
+ utterly incapable of understanding and appreciating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader will now easily conceive with what interest I took to studying
+ this wonderful institution, and with what energy I prosecuted my
+ researches. An institution which professes to solve satisfactorily the
+ most difficult social problems of the future is not to be met with every
+ day, even in Russia, which is specially rich in material for the student
+ of social science.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On my arrival at Ivanofka my knowledge of the institution was of that
+ vague, superficial kind which is commonly derived from men who are fonder
+ of sweeping generalisations and rhetorical declamation than of serious,
+ patient study of phenomena. I knew that the chief personage in a Russian
+ village is the Selski Starosta, or Village Elder, and that all important
+ Communal affairs are regulated by the Selski Skhod, or Village Assembly.
+ Further, I was aware that the land in the vicinity of the village belongs
+ to the Commune, and is distributed periodically among the members in such
+ a way that every able-bodied peasant possesses a share sufficient, or
+ nearly sufficient, for his maintenance. Beyond this elementary information
+ I knew little or nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My first attempt at extending my knowledge was not very successful. Hoping
+ that my friend Ivan might be able to assist me, and knowing that the
+ popular name for the Commune is Mir, which means also "the world," I put
+ to him the direct, simple question, "What is the Mir?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ivan was not easily disconcerted, but for once he looked puzzled, and
+ stared at me vacantly. When I endeavoured to explain to him my question,
+ he simply knitted his brows and scratched the back of his head. This
+ latter movement is the Russian peasant's method of accelerating cerebral
+ action; but in the present instance it had no practical result. In spite
+ of his efforts, Ivan could not get much further than the "Kak vam
+ skazat'?" that is to say, "How am I to tell you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not difficult to perceive that I had adopted an utterly false
+ method of investigation, and a moment's reflection sufficed to show me the
+ absurdity of my question. I had asked from an uneducated man a
+ philosophical definition, instead of extracting from him material in the
+ form of concrete facts, and constructing therefrom a definition for
+ myself. These concrete facts Ivan was both able and willing to supply; and
+ as soon as I adopted a rational mode of questioning, I obtained from him
+ all I wanted. The information he gave me, together with the results of
+ much subsequent conversation and reading, I now propose to present to the
+ reader in my own words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The peasant family of the old type is, as we have just seen, a kind of
+ primitive association in which the members have nearly all things in
+ common. The village may be roughly described as a primitive association on
+ a larger scale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between these two social units there are many points of analogy. In both
+ there are common interests and common responsibilities. In both there is a
+ principal personage, who is in a certain sense ruler within and
+ representative as regards the outside world: in the one case called
+ Khozain, or Head of the Household, and in the other Starosta, or Village
+ Elder. In both the authority of the ruler is limited: in the one case by
+ the adult members of the family, and in the other by the Heads of
+ Households. In both there is a certain amount of common property: in the
+ one case the house and nearly all that it contains, and in the other the
+ arable land and possibly a little pasturage. In both cases there is a
+ certain amount of common responsibility: in the one case for all the
+ debts, and in the other for all the taxes and Communal obligations. And
+ both are protected to a certain extent against the ordinary legal
+ consequences of insolvency, for the family cannot be deprived of its house
+ or necessary agricultural implements, and the Commune cannot be deprived
+ of its land, by importunate creditors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, there are many important points of contrast. The
+ Commune is, of course, much larger than the family, and the mutual
+ relations of its members are by no means so closely interwoven. The
+ members of a family all farm together, and those of them who earn money
+ from other sources are expected to put their savings into the common
+ purse; whilst the households composing a Commune farm independently, and
+ pay into the common treasury only a certain fixed sum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From these brief remarks the reader will at once perceive that a Russian
+ village is something very different from a village in our sense of the
+ term, and that the villagers are bound together by ties quite unknown to
+ the English rural population. A family living in an English village has
+ little reason to take an interest in the affairs of its neighbours. The
+ isolation of the individual families is never quite perfect, for man,
+ being a social animal, takes necessarily a certain interest in the affairs
+ of those around him, and this social duty is sometimes fulfilled by the
+ weaker sex with more zeal than is absolutely indispensable for the public
+ welfare; but families may live for many years in the same village without
+ ever becoming conscious of common interests. So long as the Jones family
+ do not commit any culpable breach of public order, such as putting
+ obstructions on the highway or habitually setting their house on fire,
+ their neighbour Brown takes probably no interest in their affairs, and has
+ no ground for interfering with their perfect liberty of action. Amongst
+ the families composing a Russian village, such a state of isolation is
+ impossible. The Heads of Households must often meet together and consult
+ in the Village Assembly, and their daily occupation must be influenced by
+ the Communal decrees. They cannot begin to mow the hay or plough the
+ fallow field until the Village Assembly has passed a resolution on the
+ subject. If a peasant becomes a drunkard, or takes some equally efficient
+ means to become insolvent, every family in the village has a right to
+ complain, not merely in the interests of public morality, but from selfish
+ motives, because all the families are collectively responsible for his
+ taxes.* For the same reason no peasant can permanently leave the village
+ without the consent of the Commune, and this consent will not be granted
+ until the applicant gives satisfactory security for the fulfilment of his
+ actual and future liabilities. If a peasant wishes to go away for a short
+ time, in order to work elsewhere, he must obtain a written permission,
+ which serves him as a passport during his absence; and he may be recalled
+ at any moment by a Communal decree. In reality he is rarely recalled so
+ long as he sends home regularly the full amount of his taxes&mdash;including
+ the dues which he has to pay for the temporary passport&mdash;but
+ sometimes the Commune uses the power of recall for purposes of extortion.
+ If it becomes known, for instance, that an absent member is receiving a
+ good salary or otherwise making money, he may one day receive a formal
+ order to return at once to his native village, but he is probably informed
+ at the same time, unofficially, that his presence will be dispensed with
+ if he will send to the Commune a certain specified sum. The money thus
+ sent is generally used by the Commune for convivial purposes. **
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This common responsibility for the taxes was abolished in
+ 1903 by the Emperor, on the advice of M. Witte, and the
+ other Communal fetters are being gradually relaxed. A
+ peasant may now, if he wishes, cease to be a member of the
+ Commune altogether, as soon as he has defrayed all his
+ outstanding obligations.
+
+ ** With the recent relaxing of the Communal fetters,
+ referred to in the foregoing note, this abuse should
+ disappear.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In all countries the theory of government and administration differs
+ considerably from the actual practice. Nowhere is this difference greater
+ than in Russia, and in no Russian institution is it greater than in the
+ Village Commune. It is necessary, therefore, to know both theory and
+ practice; and it is well to begin with the former, because it is the
+ simpler of the two. When we have once thoroughly mastered the theory, it
+ is easy to understand the deviations that are made to suit peculiar local
+ conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According, then, to theory, all male peasants in every part of the Empire
+ are inscribed in census-lists, which form the basis of the direct
+ taxation. These lists are revised at irregular intervals, and all males
+ alive at the time of the "revision," from the newborn babe to the
+ centenarian, are duly inscribed. Each Commune has a list of this kind, and
+ pays to the Government an annual sum proportionate to the number of names
+ which the list contains, or, in popular language, according to the number
+ of "revision souls." During the intervals between the revisions the
+ financial authorities take no notice of the births and deaths. A Commune
+ which has a hundred male members at the time of the revision may have in a
+ few years considerably more or considerably less than that number, but it
+ has to pay taxes for a hundred members all the same until a new revision
+ is made for the whole Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now in Russia, so far at least as the rural population is concerned, the
+ payment of taxes is inseparably connected with the possession of land.
+ Every peasant who pays taxes is supposed to have a share of the land
+ belonging to the Commune. If the Communal revision lists contain a hundred
+ names, the Communal land ought to be divided into a hundred shares, and
+ each "revision soul" should enjoy his share in return for the taxes which
+ he pays.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader who has followed my explanations up to this point may naturally
+ conclude that the taxes paid by the peasants are in reality a species of
+ rent for the land which they enjoy. Such a conclusion would not be
+ altogether justified. When a man rents a bit of land he acts according to
+ his own judgment, and makes a voluntary contract with the proprietor; but
+ the Russian peasant is obliged to pay his taxes whether he desires to
+ enjoy land or not. The theory, therefore, that the taxes are simply the
+ rent of the land will not bear even superficial examination. Equally
+ untenable is the theory that they are a species of land-tax. In any
+ reasonable system of land-dues the yearly sum imposed bears some kind of
+ proportion to the quantity and quality of the land enjoyed; but in Russia
+ it may be that the members of one Commune possess six acres of bad land,
+ and the members of the neighbouring Commune seven acres of good land, and
+ yet the taxes in both cases are the same. The truth is that the taxes are
+ personal, and are calculated according to the number of male "souls," and
+ the Government does not take the trouble to inquire how the Communal land
+ is distributed. The Commune has to pay into the Imperial Treasury a fixed
+ yearly sum, according to the number of its "revision souls," and
+ distributes the land among its members as it thinks fit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How, then, does the Commune distribute the land? To this question it is
+ impossible to reply in brief, general terms, because each Commune acts as
+ it pleases!* Some act strictly according to the theory. These divide their
+ land at the time of the revision into a number of portions or shares
+ corresponding to the number of revision souls, and give to each family a
+ number of shares corresponding to the number of revision souls which it
+ contains. This is from the administrative point of view by far the
+ simplest system. The census-list determines how much land each family will
+ enjoy, and the existing tenures are disturbed only by the revisions which
+ take place at irregular intervals.** But, on the other hand, this system
+ has serious defects. The revision-list represents merely the numerical
+ strength of the families, and the numerical strength is often not at all
+ in proportion to the working power. Let us suppose, for example, two
+ families, each containing at the time of the revision five male members.
+ According to the census-list these two families are equal, and ought to
+ receive equal shares of the land; but in reality it may happen that the
+ one contains a father in the prime of life and four able-bodies sons,
+ whilst the other contains a widow and five little boys. The wants and
+ working power of these two families are of course very different; and if
+ the above system of distribution be applied, the man with four sons and a
+ goodly supply of grandchildren will probably find that he has too little
+ land, whilst the widow with her five little boys will find it difficult to
+ cultivate the five shares alloted to her, and utterly impossible to pay
+ the corresponding amount of taxation&mdash;for in all cases, it must be
+ remembered, the Communal burdens are distributed in the same proportion as
+ the land.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * A long list of the various systems of allotment to be
+ found in individual Communes in different parts of the
+ country is given in the opening chapter of a valuable work
+ by Karelin, entitled "Obshtchinnoye Vladyenie v Rossii" (St.
+ Petersburg, 1893). As my object is to convey to the reader
+ merely a general idea of the institution, I refrain from
+ confusing him by an enumeration of the endless divergencies
+ from the original type.
+
+ ** Since 1719 eleven revisions have been made, the last in
+ 1897. The intervals varied from six to forty-one years.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But why, it may be said, should the widow not accept provisionally the
+ five shares, and let to others the part which she does not require? The
+ balance of rent after payment of the taxes might help her to bring up her
+ young family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it seems to one acquainted only with the rural economy of England,
+ where land is scarce, and always gives a revenue more than sufficient to
+ defray the taxes. But in Russia the possession of a share of Communal land
+ is often not a privilege, but a burden. In some Communes the land is so
+ poor and abundant that it cannot be let at any price. In others the soil
+ will repay cultivation, but a fair rent will not suffice to pay the taxes
+ and dues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To obviate these inconvenient results of the simpler system, many Communes
+ have adopted the expedient of allotting the land, not according to the
+ number of revision souls, but according to the working power of the
+ families. Thus, in the instance above supposed, the widow would receive
+ perhaps two shares, and the large household, containing five workers,
+ would receive perhaps seven or eight. Since the breaking-up of the large
+ families, such inequality as I have supposed is, of course, rare; but
+ inequality of a less extreme kind does still occur, and justifies a
+ departure from the system of allotment according to the revision-lists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even if the allotment be fair and equitable at the time of the revision,
+ it may soon become unfair and burdensome by the natural fluctuations of
+ the population. Births and deaths may in the course of a very few years
+ entirely alter the relative working power of the various families. The
+ sons of the widow may grow up to manhood, whilst two or three able-bodied
+ members of the other family may be cut off by an epidemic. Thus, long
+ before a new revision takes place, the distribution of the land may be no
+ longer in accordance with the wants and capacities of the various families
+ composing the Commune. To correct this, various expedients are employed.
+ Some Communes transfer particular lots from one family to another, as
+ circumstances demand; whilst others make from time to time, during the
+ intervals between the revisions, a complete redistribution and reallotment
+ of the land. Of these two systems the former is now more frequently
+ employed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The system of allotment adopted depends entirely on the will of the
+ particular Commune. In this respect the Communes enjoy the most complete
+ autonomy, and no peasant ever dreams of appealing against a Communal
+ decree.* The higher authorities not only abstain from all interference in
+ the allotment of the Communal lands, but remain in profound ignorance as
+ to which system the Communes habitually adopt. Though the Imperial
+ Administration has a most voracious appetite for symmetrically constructed
+ statistical tables&mdash;many of them formed chiefly out of materials
+ supplied by the mysterious inner consciousness of the subordinate
+ officials&mdash;no attempt has yet been made, so far as I know, to collect
+ statistical data which might throw light on this important subject. In
+ spite of the systematic and persistent efforts of the centralised
+ bureaucracy to regulate minutely all departments of the national life, the
+ rural Communes, which contain about five-sixths of the population, remain
+ in many respects entirely beyond its influence, and even beyond its sphere
+ of vision! But let not the reader be astonished overmuch. He will learn in
+ time that Russia is the land of paradoxes; and meanwhile he is about to
+ receive a still more startling bit of information. In "the great
+ stronghold of Caesarian despotism and centralised bureaucracy," these
+ Village Communes, containing about five-sixths of the population, are
+ capital specimens of representative Constitutional government of the
+ extreme democratic type!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This has been somewhat modified by recent legislation.
+ According to the Emancipation Law of 1861, redistribution of
+ the land could take place at any time provided it was voted
+ by a majority of two-thirds at the Village Assembly. By a
+ law of 1893 redistribution cannot take place oftener than
+ once in twelve years, and must receive the sanction of
+ certain local authorities.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When I say that the rural Commune is a good specimen of Constitutional
+ government, I use the phrase in the English, and not in the Continental
+ sense. In the Continental languages a Constitutional regime implies the
+ existence of a long, formal document, in which the functions of the
+ various institutions, the powers of the various authorities, and the
+ methods of procedure are carefully defined. Such a document was never
+ heard of in Russian Village Communes, except those belonging to the
+ Imperial Domains, and the special legislation which formerly regulated
+ their affairs was repealed at the time of the Emancipation. At the present
+ day the Constitution of all the Village Communes is of the English type&mdash;a
+ body of unwritten, traditional conceptions, which have grown up and
+ modified themselves under the influence of ever-changing practical
+ necessity. No doubt certain definitions of the functions and mutual
+ relations of the Communal authorities might be extracted from the
+ Emancipation Law and subsequent official documents, but as a rule neither
+ the Village Elder nor the members of the Village Assembly ever heard of
+ such definitions; and yet every peasant knows, as if by instinct, what
+ each of these authorities can do and cannot do. The Commune is, in fact, a
+ living institution, whose spontaneous vitality enables it to dispense with
+ the assistance and guidance of the written law, and its constitution is
+ thoroughly democratic. The Elder represents merely the executive power.
+ The real authority resides in the Assembly, of which all Heads of
+ Households are members.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * An attempt was made by Alexander III. in 1884 to bring the
+ rural Communes under supervision and control by the
+ appointment of rural officials called Zemskiye Natchalniki.
+ Of this so-called reform I shall have occasion to speak
+ later.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The simple procedure, or rather the absence of all formal procedure, at
+ the Assemblies, illustrates admirably the essentially practical character
+ of the institution. The meetings are held in the open air, because in the
+ village there is no building&mdash;except the church, which can be used
+ only for religious purposes&mdash;large enough to contain all the members;
+ and they almost always take place on Sundays or holidays, when the
+ peasants have plenty of leisure. Any open space may serve as a Forum. The
+ discussions are occasionally very animated, but there is rarely any
+ attempt at speech-making. If any young member should show an inclination
+ to indulge in oratory, he is sure to be unceremoniously interrupted by
+ some of the older members, who have never any sympathy with fine talking.
+ The assemblage has the appearance of a crowd of people who have
+ accidentally come together and are discussing in little groups subjects of
+ local interest. Gradually some one group, containing two or three peasants
+ who have more moral influence than their fellows, attracts the others, and
+ the discussion becomes general. Two or more peasants may speak at a time,
+ and interrupt each other freely&mdash;using plain, unvarnished language,
+ not at all parliamentary&mdash;and the discussion may become a confused,
+ unintelligible din; but at the moment when the spectator imagines that the
+ consultation is about to be transformed into a free fight, the tumult
+ spontaneously subsides, or perhaps a general roar of laughter announces
+ that some one has been successfully hit by a strong argumentum ad hominem,
+ or biting personal remark. In any case there is no danger of the
+ disputants coming to blows. No class of men in the world are more
+ good-natured and pacific than the Russian peasantry. When sober they never
+ fight, and even when under the influence of alcohol they are more likely
+ to be violently affectionate than disagreeably quarrelsome. If two of them
+ take to drinking together, the probability is that in a few minutes,
+ though they may never have seen each other before, they will be expressing
+ in very strong terms their mutual regard and affection, confirming their
+ words with an occasional friendly embrace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Theoretically speaking, the Village Parliament has a Speaker, in the
+ person of the Village Elder. The word Speaker is etymologically less
+ objectionable than the term President, for the personage in question never
+ sits down, but mingles in the crowd like the ordinary members. Objection
+ may be taken to the word on the ground that the Elder speaks much less
+ than many other members, but this may likewise be said of the Speaker of
+ the House of Commons. Whatever we may call him, the Elder is officially
+ the principal personage in the crowd, and wears the insignia of office in
+ the form of a small medal suspended from his neck by a thin brass chain.
+ His duties, however, are extremely light. To call to order those who
+ interrupt the discussion is no part of his functions. If he calls an
+ honourable member "Durak" (blockhead), or interrupts an orator with a
+ laconic "Moltchi!" (hold your tongue!), he does so in virtue of no special
+ prerogative, but simply in accordance with a time-honoured privilege,
+ which is equally enjoyed by all present, and may be employed with impunity
+ against himself. Indeed, it may be said in general that the phraseology
+ and the procedure are not subjected to any strict rules. The Elder comes
+ prominently forward only when it is necessary to take the sense of the
+ meeting. On such occasions he may stand back a little from the crowd and
+ say, "Well, orthodox, have you decided so?" and the crowd will probably
+ shout, "Ladno! ladno!" that is to say, "Agreed! agreed!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Communal measures are generally carried in this way by acclamation; but it
+ sometimes happens that there is such a diversity of opinion that it is
+ difficult to tell which of the two parties has a majority. In this case
+ the Elder requests the one party to stand to the right and the other to
+ the left. The two groups are then counted, and the minority submits, for
+ no one ever dreams of opposing openly the will of the Mir.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the reign of Nicholas I. an attempt was made to regulate by the
+ written law the procedure of Village Assemblies amongst the peasantry of
+ the State Domains, and among other reforms voting by ballot was
+ introduced; but the new custom never struck root. The peasants did not
+ regard with favour the new method, and persisted in calling it,
+ contemptuously, "playing at marbles." Here, again, we have one of those
+ wonderful and apparently anomalous facts which frequently meet the student
+ of Russian affairs: the Emperor Nicholas I., the incarnation of autocracy
+ and the champion of the Reactionary Party throughout Europe, forces the
+ ballot-box, the ingenious invention of extreme radicals, on several
+ millions of his subjects!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the northern provinces, where a considerable portion of the male
+ population is always absent, the Village Assembly generally includes a
+ good many female members. These are women who, on account of the absence
+ or death of their husbands, happen to be for the moment Heads of
+ Households. As such they are entitled to be present, and their right to
+ take part in the deliberations is never called in question. In matters
+ affecting the general welfare of the Commune they rarely speak, and if
+ they do venture to enounce an opinion on such occasions they have little
+ chance of commanding attention, for the Russian peasantry are as yet
+ little imbued with the modern doctrines of female equality, and express
+ their opinion of female intelligence by the homely adage: "The hair is
+ long, but the mind is short." According to one proverb, seven women have
+ collectively but one soul, and, according to a still more ungallant
+ popular saying, women have no souls at all, but only a vapour. Woman,
+ therefore, as woman, is not deserving of much consideration, but a
+ particular woman, as Head of a Household, is entitled to speak on all
+ questions directly affecting the household under her care. If, for
+ instance, it be proposed to increase or diminish her household's share of
+ the land and the burdens, she will be allowed to speak freely on the
+ subject, and even to indulge in personal invective against her male
+ opponents. She thereby exposes herself, it is true, to uncomplimentary
+ remarks; but any which she happens to receive she is pretty sure to repay
+ with interest&mdash;referring, perhaps, with pertinent virulence to the
+ domestic affairs of those who attack her. And when argument and invective
+ fail, she can try the effect of pathetic appeal, supported by copious
+ tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the Village Assembly is really a representative institution in the full
+ sense of the term, it reflects faithfully the good and the bad qualities
+ of the rural population. Its decisions are therefore usually characterised
+ by plain, practical common sense, but it is subject to occasional
+ unfortunate aberrations in consequence of pernicious influences, chiefly
+ of an alcoholic kind. An instance of this fact occurred during my sojourn
+ at Ivanofka. The question under discussion was whether a kabak, or
+ gin-shop, should be established in the village. A trader from the district
+ town desired to establish one, and offered to pay to the Commune a yearly
+ sum for the necessary permission. The more industrious, respectable
+ members of the Commune, backed by the whole female population, were
+ strongly opposed to the project, knowing full well that a kabak would
+ certainly lead to the ruin of more than one household; but the
+ enterprising trader had strong arguments wherewith to seduce a large
+ number of the members, and succeeded in obtaining a decision in his
+ favour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Assembly discusses all matters affecting the Communal welfare, and, as
+ these matters have never been legally defined, its recognised competence
+ is very wide. It fixes the time for making the hay, and the day for
+ commencing the ploughing of the fallow field; it decrees what measures
+ shall be employed against those who do not punctually pay their taxes; it
+ decides whether a new member shall be admitted into the Commune, and
+ whether an old member shall be allowed to change his domicile; it gives or
+ withholds permission to erect new buildings on the Communal land; it
+ prepares and signs all contracts which the Commune makes with one of its
+ own members or with a stranger; it interferes whenever it thinks necessary
+ in the domestic affairs of its members; it elects the Elder&mdash;as well
+ as the Communal tax-collector and watchman, where such offices exist&mdash;and
+ the Communal herd-boy; above all, it divides and allots the Communal land
+ among the members as it thinks fit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all these various proceedings the English reader may naturally assume
+ that the elections are the most noisy and exciting. In reality this is a
+ mistake. The elections produce little excitement, for the simple reason
+ that, as a rule, no one desires to be elected. Once, it is said, a peasant
+ who had been guilty of some misdemeanor was informed by an Arbiter of the
+ Peace&mdash;a species of official of which I shall have occasion to speak
+ in the sequel&mdash;that he would be no longer capable of filling any
+ Communal office; and instead of regretting this diminution of his civil
+ rights, he bowed very low, and respectfully expressed his thanks for the
+ new privilege which he had acquired. This anecdote may not be true, but it
+ illustrates the undoubted fact that the Russian peasant regards office as
+ a burden rather than as an honour. There is no civic ambition in those
+ little rural commonwealths, whilst the privilege of wearing a bronze
+ medal, which commands no respect, and the reception of a few roubles as
+ salary afford no adequate compensation for the trouble, annoyance, and
+ responsibility which a Village Elder has to bear. The elections are
+ therefore generally very tame and uninteresting. The following description
+ may serve as an illustration:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a Sunday afternoon. The peasants, male and female, have turned out
+ in Sunday attire, and the bright costumes of the women help the sunshine
+ to put a little rich colour into the scene, which is at ordinary times
+ monotonously grey. Slowly the crowd collects on the open space at the side
+ of the church. All classes of the population are represented. On the
+ extreme outskirts are a band of fair-haired, merry children&mdash;some of
+ them standing or lying on the grass and gazing attentively at the
+ proceedings, and others running about and amusing themselves. Close to
+ these stand a group of young girls, convulsed with half-suppressed
+ laughter. The cause of their merriment is a youth of some seventeen
+ summers, evidently the wag of the village, who stands beside them with an
+ accordion in his hand, and relates to them in a half-whisper how he is
+ about to be elected Elder, and what mad pranks he will play in that
+ capacity. When one of the girls happens to laugh outright, the matrons who
+ are standing near turn round and scowl; and one of them, stepping forward,
+ orders the offender, in a tone of authority, to go home at once if she
+ cannot behave herself. Crestfallen, the culprit retires, and the youth who
+ is the cause of the merriment makes the incident the subject of a new
+ joke. Meanwhile the deliberations have begun. The majority of the members
+ are chatting together, or looking at a little group composed of three
+ peasants and a woman, who are standing a little apart from the others.
+ Here alone the matter in hand is being really discussed. The woman is
+ explaining, with tears in her eyes, and with a vast amount of useless
+ repetition, that her "old man," who is Elder for the time being, is very
+ ill, and cannot fulfil his duties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But he has not yet served a year, and he'll get better," remarks one
+ peasant, evidently the youngest of the little group.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who knows?" replies the woman, sobbing. "It is the will of God, but I
+ don't believe that he'll ever put his foot to the ground again. The
+ Feldsher has been four times to see him, and the doctor himself came once,
+ and said that he must be brought to the hospital."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And why has he not been taken there?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How could he be taken? Who is to carry him? Do you think he's a baby? The
+ hospital is forty versts off. If you put him in a cart he would die before
+ he had gone a verst. And then, who knows what they do with people in the
+ hospital?" This last question contained probably the true reason why the
+ doctor's orders had been disobeyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well, that's enough; hold your tongue," says the grey-beard of the
+ little group to the woman; and then, turning to the other peasants,
+ remarks, "There is nothing to be done. The Stanovoi [officer of rural
+ police] will be here one of these days, and will make a row again if we
+ don't elect a new Elder. Whom shall we choose?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as this question is asked several peasants look down to the
+ ground, or try in some other way to avoid attracting attention, lest their
+ names should be suggested. When the silence has continued a minute or two,
+ the greybeard says, "There is Alexei Ivanof; he has not served yet!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes, Alexei Ivanof!" shout half-a-dozen voices, belonging probably
+ to peasants who fear they may be elected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexei protests in the strongest terms. He cannot say that he is ill,
+ because his big ruddy face would give him the lie direct, but he finds
+ half-a-dozen other reasons why he should not be chosen, and accordingly
+ requests to be excused. But his protestations are not listened to, and the
+ proceedings terminate. A new Village Elder has been duly elected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Far more important than the elections is the redistribution of the
+ Communal land. It can matter but little to the Head of a Household how the
+ elections go, provided he himself is not chosen. He can accept with
+ perfect equanimity Alexei, or Ivan, or Nikolai, because the office-bearers
+ have very little influence in Communal affairs. But he cannot remain a
+ passive, indifferent spectator when the division and allotment of the land
+ come to be discussed, for the material welfare of every household depends
+ to a great extent on the amount of land and of burdens which it receives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the southern provinces, where the soil is fertile, and the taxes do not
+ exceed the normal rent, the process of division and allotment is
+ comparatively simple. Here each peasant desires to get as much land as
+ possible, and consequently each household demands all the land to which it
+ is entitled&mdash;that is to say, a number of shares equal to the number
+ of its members inscribed in the last revision list. The Assembly has
+ therefore no difficult questions to decide. The Communal revision list
+ determines the number of shares into which the land must be divided, and
+ the number of shares to be allotted to each family. The only difficulty
+ likely to arise is as to which particular shares a particular family shall
+ receive, and this difficulty is commonly obviated by the custom of drawing
+ lots. There may be, it is true, some difference of opinion as to when a
+ redistribution should be made, but this question is easily decided by a
+ vote of the Assembly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very different is the process of division and allotment in many Communes
+ of the northern provinces. Here the soil is often very unfertile and the
+ taxes exceed the normal rent, and consequently it may happen that the
+ peasants strive to have as little land as possible. In these cases such
+ scenes as the following may occur:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ivan is being asked how many shares of the Communal land he will take, and
+ replies in a slow, contemplative way, "I have two sons, and there is
+ myself, so I'll take three shares, or somewhat less, if it is your
+ pleasure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Less!" exclaims a middle-aged peasant, who is not the Village Elder, but
+ merely an influential member, and takes the leading part in the
+ proceedings. "You talk nonsense. Your two sons are already old enough to
+ help you, and soon they may get married, and so bring you two new female
+ labourers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My eldest son," explains Ivan, "always works in Moscow, and the other
+ often leaves me in summer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But they both send or bring home money, and when they get married, the
+ wives will remain with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God knows what will be," replies Ivan, passing over in silence the first
+ part of his opponent's remark. "Who knows if they will marry?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You can easily arrange that!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I cannot do. The times are changed now. The young people do as they
+ wish, and when they do get married they all wish to have houses of their
+ own. Three shares will be heavy enough for me!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no. If they wish to separate from you, they will take some land from
+ you. You must take at least four. The old wives there who have little
+ children cannot take shares according to the number of souls."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is a rich muzhik!" says a voice in the crowd. "Lay on him five souls!"
+ (that is to say, give him five shares of the land and of the burdens).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Five souls I cannot! By God, I cannot!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well, you shall have four," says the leading spirit to Ivan; and
+ then, turning to the crowd, inquires, "Shall it be so?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Four! four!" murmurs the crowd; and the question is settled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next comes one of the old wives just referred to. Her husband is a
+ permanent invalid, and she has three little boys, only one of whom is old
+ enough for field labour. If the number of souls were taken as the basis of
+ distribution, she would receive four shares; but she would never be able
+ to pay four shares of the Communal burdens. She must therefore receive
+ less than that amount. When asked how many she will take, she replies with
+ downcast eyes, "As the Mir decides, so be it!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then you must take three."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do you say, little father?" cries the woman, throwing off suddenly
+ her air of submissive obedience. "Do you hear that, ye orthodox? They want
+ to lay upon me three souls! Was such a thing ever heard of? Since St.
+ Peter's Day my husband has been bedridden&mdash;bewitched, it seems, for
+ nothing does him good. He cannot put a foot to the ground&mdash;all the
+ same as if he were dead; only he eats bread!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You talk nonsense," says a neighbour; "he was in the kabak [gin-shop]
+ last week."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you!" retorts the woman, wandering from the subject in hand; "what
+ did YOU do last parish fete? Was it not you who got drunk and beat your
+ wife till she roused the whole village with her shrieking? And no further
+ gone than last Sunday&mdash;pfu!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Listen!" says the old man, sternly cutting short the torrent of
+ invective. "You must take at least two shares and a half. If you cannot
+ manage it yourself, you can get some one to help you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How can that be? Where am I to get the money to pay a labourer?" asks the
+ woman, with much wailing and a flood of tears. "Have pity, ye orthodox, on
+ the poor orphans! God will reward you!" and so on, and so on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I need not worry the reader with a further description of these scenes,
+ which are always very long and sometimes violent. All present are deeply
+ interested, for the allotment of the land is by far the most important
+ event in Russian peasant life, and the arrangement cannot be made without
+ endless talking and discussion. After the number of shares for each family
+ has been decided, the distribution of the lots gives rise to new
+ difficulties. The families who have plentifully manured their land strive
+ to get back their old lots, and the Commune respects their claims so far
+ as these are consistent with the new arrangement; but often it happens
+ that it is impossible to conciliate private rights and Communal interests,
+ and in such cases the former are sacrificed in a way that would not be
+ tolerated by men of Anglo-Saxon race. This leads, however, to no serious
+ consequences. The peasants are accustomed to work together in this way, to
+ make concessions for the Communal welfare, and to bow unreservedly to the
+ will of the Mir. I know of many instances where the peasants have set at
+ defiance the authority of the police, of the provincial governor, and of
+ the central Government itself, but I have never heard of any instance
+ where the will of the Mir was openly opposed by one of its members.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the preceding pages I have repeatedly spoken about "shares of the
+ Communal land." To prevent misconception I must explain carefully what
+ this expression means. A share does not mean simply a plot or parcel of
+ land; on the contrary, it always contains at least four, and may contain a
+ large number of distinct plots. We have here a new point of difference
+ between the Russian village and the villages of Western Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Communal land in Russia is of three kinds: the land on which the village
+ is built, the arable land, and the meadow or hay-field, if the village is
+ fortunate enough to possess one. On the first of these each family
+ possesses a house and garden, which are the hereditary property of the
+ family, and are never affected by the periodical redistributions. The
+ other two kinds are both subject to redistribution, but on somewhat
+ different principles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole of the Communal arable land is first of all divided into three
+ fields, to suit the triennial rotation of crops already described, and
+ each field is divided into a number of long narrow strips&mdash;corresponding
+ to the number of male members in the Commune&mdash;as nearly as possible
+ equal to each other in area and quality. Sometimes it is necessary to
+ divide the field into several portions, according to the quality of the
+ soil, and then to subdivide each of these portions into the requisite
+ number of strips. Thus in all cases every household possesses at least one
+ strip in each field; and in those cases where subdivision is necessary,
+ every household possesses a strip in each of the portions into which the
+ field is subdivided. It often happens, therefore, that the strips are very
+ narrow, and the portions belonging to each family very numerous. Strips
+ six feet wide are by no means rare. In 124 villages of the province of
+ Moscow, regarding which I have special information, they varied in width
+ from 3 to 45 yards, with an average of 11 yards. Of these narrow strips a
+ household may possess as many as thirty in a single field! The complicated
+ process of division and subdivision is accomplished by the peasants
+ themselves, with the aid of simple measuring-rods, and the accuracy of the
+ result is truly marvellous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The meadow, which is reserved for the production of hay, is divided into
+ the same number of shares as the arable land. There, however, the division
+ and distribution take place, not at irregular intervals, but annually.
+ Every year, on a day fixed by the Assembly, the villagers proceed in a
+ body to this part of their property, and divide it into the requisite
+ number of portions. Lots are then cast, and each family at once mows the
+ portion allotted to it. In some Communes the meadow is mown by all the
+ peasants in common, and the hay afterwards distributed by lot among the
+ families; but this system is by no means so frequently used.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the whole of the Communal land thus resembles to some extent a big
+ farm, it is necessary to make certain rules concerning cultivation. A
+ family may sow what it likes in the land allotted to it, but all families
+ must at least conform to the accepted system of rotation. In like manner,
+ a family cannot begin the autumn ploughing before the appointed time,
+ because it would thereby interfere with the rights of the other families,
+ who use the fallow field as pasturage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not a little strange that this primitive system of land tenure
+ should have succeeded in living into the twentieth century, and still more
+ remarkable that the institution of which it forms an essential part should
+ be regarded by many intelligent people as one of the great institutions of
+ the future, and almost as a panacea for social and political evils. The
+ explanation of these facts will form the subject of the next chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ HOW THE COMMUNE HAS BEEN PRESERVED, AND WHAT IT IS TO EFFECT IN THE FUTURE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sweeping Reforms after the Crimean War&mdash;Protest Against the Laissez
+ Faire Principle&mdash;Fear of the Proletariat&mdash;English and Russian
+ Methods of Legislation Contrasted&mdash;Sanguine Expectations&mdash;Evil
+ Consequences of the Communal System&mdash;The Commune of the Future&mdash;Proletariat
+ of the Towns&mdash;The Present State of Things Merely Temporary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader is probably aware that immediately after the Crimean War Russia
+ was subjected to a series of sweeping reforms, including the emancipation
+ of the serfs and the creation of a new system of local self-government,
+ and he may naturally wonder how it came to pass that a curious, primitive
+ institution like the rural Commune succeeded in weathering the
+ bureaucratic hurricane. This strange phenomena I now proceed to explain,
+ partly because the subject is in itself interesting, and partly because I
+ hope thereby to throw some light on the peculiar intellectual condition of
+ the Russian educated classes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it became evident, in 1857, that the serfs were about to be
+ emancipated, it was at first pretty generally supposed that the rural
+ Commune would be entirely abolished, or at least radically modified. At
+ that time many Russians were enthusiastic, indiscriminate admirers of
+ English institutions, and believed, in common with the orthodox school of
+ political economists, that England had acquired her commercial and
+ industrial superiority by adopting the principle of individual liberty and
+ unrestricted competition, or, as French writers term it, the "laissez
+ faire" principle. This principle is plainly inconsistent with the rural
+ Commune, which compels the peasantry to possess land, prevents an
+ enterprising peasant from acquiring the land of his less enterprising
+ neighbours, and places very considerable restrictions on the freedom of
+ action of the individual members. Accordingly it was assumed that the
+ rural Commune, being inconsistent with the modern spirit of progress,
+ would find no place in the new regime of liberty which was about to be
+ inaugurated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner had these ideas been announced in the Press than they called
+ forth strenuous protests. In the crowd of protesters were two well-defined
+ groups. On the one hand there were the so-called Slavophils, a small band
+ of patriotic, highly educated Moscovites, who were strongly disposed to
+ admire everything specifically Russian, and who habitually refused to bow
+ the knee to the wisdom of Western Europe. These gentlemen, in a special
+ organ which they had recently founded, pointed out to their countrymen
+ that the Commune was a venerable and peculiarly Russian institution, which
+ had mitigated in the past the baneful influence of serfage, and would
+ certainly in the future confer inestimable benefits on the emancipated
+ peasantry. The other group was animated by a very different spirit. They
+ had no sympathy with national peculiarities, and no reverence for hoary
+ antiquity. That the Commune was specifically Russian or Slavonic, and a
+ remnant of primitive times, was in their eyes anything but a
+ recommendation in its favour. Cosmopolitan in their tendencies, and
+ absolutely free from all archaeological sentimentality, they regarded the
+ institution from the purely utilitarian point of view. They agreed,
+ however, with the Slavophils in thinking that its preservation would have
+ a beneficial influence on the material and moral welfare of the peasantry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the sake of convenience it is necessary to designate this latter group
+ by some definite name, but I confess I have some difficulty in making a
+ choice. I do not wish to call these gentlemen Socialists, because many
+ people habitually and involuntarily attach a stigma to the word, and
+ believe that all to whom the term is applied must be first-cousins to the
+ petroleuses. To avoid misconceptions of this kind, it will be well to
+ designate them simply by the organ which most ably represented their
+ views, and to call them the adherents of The Contemporary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Slavophils and the adherents of The Contemporary, though differing
+ widely from each other in many respects, had the same immediate object in
+ view, and accordingly worked together. With great ingenuity they contended
+ that the Communal system of land tenure had much greater advantages, and
+ was attended with much fewer inconveniences, than people generally
+ supposed. But they did not confine themselves to these immediate practical
+ advantages, which had very little interest for the general reader. The
+ writers in The Contemporary explained that the importance of the rural
+ Commune lies, not in its actual condition, but in its capabilities of
+ development, and they drew, with prophetic eye, most attractive pictures
+ of the happy rural Commune of the future. Let me give here, as an
+ illustration, one of these prophetic descriptions:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thanks to the spread of primary and technical education the peasants have
+ become well acquainted with the science of agriculture, and are always
+ ready to undertake in common the necessary improvements. They no longer
+ exhaust the soil by exporting the grain, but sell merely certain technical
+ products containing no mineral ingredients. For this purpose the Communes
+ possess distilleries, starch-works, and the like, and the soil thereby
+ retains its original fertility. The scarcity induced by the natural
+ increase of the population is counteracted by improved methods of
+ cultivation. If the Chinese, who know nothing of natural science, have
+ succeeded by purely empirical methods in perfecting agriculture to such an
+ extent that a whole family can support itself on a few square yards of
+ land, what may not the European do with the help of chemistry, botanical
+ physiology, and the other natural sciences?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Coming back from the possibilities of the future to the actualities of the
+ present, these ingenious and eloquent writers pointed out that in the
+ rural Commune, Russia possessed a sure preventive against the greatest
+ evil of West-European social organisation, the Proletariat. Here the
+ Slavophils could strike in with their favourite refrain about the rotten
+ social condition of Western Europe; and their temporary allies, though
+ they habitually scoffed at the Slavophil jeremiads, had no reason for the
+ moment to contradict them. Very soon the Proletariat became, for the
+ educated classes, a species of bugbear, and the reading public were
+ converted to the doctrine that the Communal institutions should be
+ preserved as a means of excluding the monster from Russia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This fear of what is vaguely termed the Proletariat is still frequently to
+ be met with in Russia, and I have often taken pains to discover precisely
+ what is meant by the term. I cannot, however, say that my efforts have
+ been completely successful. The monster seems to be as vague and shadowy
+ as the awful forms which Milton placed at the gate of the infernal
+ regions. At one moment he seems to be simply our old enemy Pauperism, but
+ when we approach a little nearer we find that he expands to colossal
+ dimensions, so as to include all who do not possess inalienable landed
+ property. In short, he turns out to be, on examination, as vague and
+ undefinable as a good bugbear ought to be; and this vagueness contributed
+ probably not a little to his success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The influence which the idea of the Proletariat exercised on the public
+ mind and on the legislation at the time of the Emancipation is a very
+ notable fact, and well worthy of attention, because it helps to illustrate
+ a point of difference between Russians and Englishmen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Englishmen are, as a rule, too much occupied with the multifarious
+ concerns of the present to look much ahead into the distant future. We
+ profess, indeed, to regard with horror the maxim, Apres nous le deluge!
+ and we should probably annihilate with our virtuous indignation any one
+ who should boldly profess the principle. And yet we often act almost as if
+ we were really partisans of that heartless creed. When called upon to
+ consider the interests of the future generations, we declared that
+ "sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof," and stigmatise as
+ visionaries and dreamers all who seek to withdraw our attention from the
+ present. A modern Cassandra who confidently predicts the near exhaustion
+ of our coal-fields, or graphically describes a crushing national disaster
+ that must some day overtake us, may attract some public attention; but
+ when we learn that the misfortune is not to take place in our time, we
+ placidly remark that future generations must take care of themselves, and
+ that we cannot reasonably be expected to bear their burdens. When we are
+ obliged to legislate, we proceed in a cautious, tentative way, and are
+ quite satisfied with any homely, simple remedies that common sense and
+ experience may suggest, without taking the trouble to inquire whether the
+ remedy adopted is in accordance with scientific theories. In short, there
+ is a certain truth in those "famous prophetick pictures" spoken of by
+ Stillingfleet, which "represent the fate of England by a mole, a creature
+ blind and busy, continually working under ground."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Russia we find the opposite extreme. There reformers have been trained,
+ not in the arena of practical politics, but in the school of political
+ speculation. As soon, therefore, as they begin to examine any simple
+ matter with a view to legislation, it at once becomes a "question," and
+ flies up into the region of political and social science. Whilst we have
+ been groping along an unexplored path, the Russians have&mdash;at least in
+ recent times&mdash;been constantly mapping out, with the help of foreign
+ experience, the country that lay before them, and advancing with gigantic
+ strides according to the newest political theories. Men trained in this
+ way cannot rest satisfied with homely remedies which merely alleviate the
+ evils of the moment. They wish to "tear up evil by the roots," and to
+ legislate for future generations as well as for themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This tendency was peculiarly strong at the time of the Emancipation. The
+ educated classes were profoundly convinced that the system of Nicholas I.
+ had been a mistake, and that a new and brighter era was about to dawn upon
+ the country. Everything had to be reformed. The whole social and political
+ edifice had to be reconstructed on entirely new principles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us imagine the position of a man who, having no practical acquaintance
+ with building, suddenly finds himself called upon to construct a large
+ house, containing all the newest appliances for convenience and comfort.
+ What will his first step be? Probably he will proceed at once to study the
+ latest authorities on architecture and construction, and when he has
+ mastered the general principles he will come down gradually to the
+ details. This is precisely what the Russians did when they found
+ themselves called upon to reconstruct the political and social edifice.
+ They eagerly consulted the most recent English, French, and German writers
+ on social and political science, and here it was that they made the
+ acquaintance of the Proletariat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ People who read books of travel without ever leaving their own country are
+ very apt to acquire exaggerated notions regarding the hardships and
+ dangers of uncivilised life. They read about savage tribes, daring
+ robbers, ferocious wild beasts, poisonous snakes, deadly fevers, and the
+ like; and they cannot but wonder how a human being can exist for a week
+ among such dangers. But if they happen thereafter to visit the countries
+ described, they discover to their surprise that, though the descriptions
+ may not have been exaggerated, life under such conditions is much easier
+ than they supposed. Now the Russians who read about the Proletariat were
+ very much like the people who remain at home and devour books of travel.
+ They gained exaggerated notions, and learned to fear the Proletariat much
+ more than we do, who habitually live in the midst of it. Of course it is
+ quite possible that their view of the subject is truer than ours, and that
+ we may some day, like the people who live tranquilly on the slopes of a
+ volcano, be rudely awakened from our fancied security. But this is an
+ entirely different question. I am at present not endeavouring to justify
+ our habitual callousness with regard to social dangers, but simply seeking
+ to explain why the Russians, who have little or no practical acquaintance
+ with pauperism, should have taken such elaborate precautions against it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But how can the preservation of the Communal institutions lead to this
+ "consummation devoutly to be wished," and how far are the precautions
+ likely to be successful?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those who have studied the mysteries of social science have generally come
+ to the conclusion that the Proletariat has been formed chiefly by the
+ expropriation of the peasantry or small land-holders, and that its
+ formation might be prevented, or at least retarded, by any system of
+ legislation which would secure the possession of land for the peasants and
+ prevent them from being uprooted from the soil. Now it must be admitted
+ that the Russian Communal system is admirably adapted for this purpose.
+ About one-half of the arable land has been reserved for the peasantry, and
+ cannot be encroached on by the great landowners or the capitalists, and
+ every adult peasant, roughly speaking, has a right to a share of this
+ land. When I have said that the peasantry compose about five-sixths of the
+ population, and that it is extremely difficult for a peasant to sever his
+ connection with the rural Commune, it will be at once evident that, if the
+ theories of social philosophers are correct, and if the sanguine
+ expectations entertained in many quarters regarding the permanence of the
+ present Communal institutions are destined to be realised, there is little
+ or no danger of a numerous Proletariat being formed, and the Russians are
+ justified in maintaining, as they often do, that they have successfully
+ solved one of the most important and most difficult of social problems.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But is there any reasonable chance of these sanguine expectations being
+ realised?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is, doubtless, a most complicated and difficult question, but it
+ cannot be shirked. However sceptical we may be with regard to social
+ panaceas of all sorts, we cannot dismiss with a few hackneyed phrases a
+ gigantic experiment in social science involving the material and moral
+ welfare of many millions of human beings. On the other hand, I do not wish
+ to exhaust the reader's patience by a long series of multifarious details
+ and conflicting arguments. What I propose to do, therefore, is to state in
+ a few words the conclusions at which I have arrived, after a careful study
+ of the question in all its bearings, and to indicate in a general way how
+ I have arrived at these conclusions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Russia were content to remain a purely agricultural country of the
+ Sleepy Hollow type, and if her Government were to devote all its energies
+ to maintaining economic and social stagnation, the rural Commune might
+ perhaps prevent the formation of a large Proletariat in the future, as it
+ has tended to prevent it for centuries in the past. The periodical
+ redistributions of the Communal land would secure to every family a
+ portion of the soil, and when the population became too dense, the evils
+ arising from inordinate subdivision of the land might be obviated by a
+ carefully regulated system of emigration to the outlying, thinly populated
+ provinces. All this sounds very well in theory, but experience is proving
+ that it cannot be carried out in practice. In Russia, as in Western
+ Europe, the struggle for life, even among the conservative agricultural
+ classes, is becoming yearly more and more intense, and is producing both
+ the desire and the necessity for greater freedom of individual character
+ and effort, so that each man may make his way in the world according to
+ the amount of his intelligence, energy, spirit of enterprise, and tenacity
+ of purpose. Whatever institutions tend to fetter the individual and
+ maintain a dead level of mediocrity have little chance of subsisting for
+ any great length of time, and it must be admitted that among such
+ institutions the rural Commune in its present form occupies a prominent
+ place. All its members must possess, in principle if not always in
+ practice, an equal share of the soil and must practice the same methods of
+ agriculture, and when a certain inequality has been created by individual
+ effort it is in great measure wiped out by a redistribution of the
+ Communal land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, I am well aware that in practice the injustice and inconveniences of
+ the system, being always tempered and corrected by ingenious compromises
+ suggested by long experience, are not nearly so great as the mere theorist
+ might naturally suppose; but they are, I believe, quite great enough to
+ prevent the permanent maintenance of the institution, and already there
+ are ominous indications of the coming change, as I shall explain more
+ fully when I come to deal with the consequences of serf-emancipation. On
+ the other hand there is no danger of a sudden, general abolition of the
+ old system. Though the law now permits the transition from Communal to
+ personal hereditary tenure, even the progressive enterprising peasants are
+ slow to avail themselves of the permission; and the reason I once heard
+ given for this conservative tendency is worth recording. A well-to-do
+ peasant who had been in the habit of manuring his land better than his
+ neighbours, and who was, consequently, a loser by the existing system,
+ said to me: "Of course I want to keep the allotment I have got. But if the
+ land is never again to be divided my grandchildren may be beggars. We must
+ not sin against those who are to come after us." This unexpected reply
+ gave me food for reflection. Surely those muzhiks who are so often accused
+ of being brutally indifferent to moral obligations must have peculiar
+ deep-rooted moral conceptions of their own which exercise a great
+ influence on their daily life. A man who hesitates to sin against his
+ grandchildren still unborn, though his conceptions of the meum and the
+ tuum in the present may be occasionally a little confused, must possess
+ somewhere deep down in his nature a secret fund of moral feeling of a very
+ respectable kind. Even among the educated classes in Russia the way of
+ looking at these matters is very different from ours. We should naturally
+ feel inclined to applaud, encourage, and assist the peasants who show
+ energy and initiative, and who try to rise above their fellows. To the
+ Russian this seems at once inexpedient and immoral. The success of the
+ few, he explains, is always obtained at the expense of the many, and
+ generally by means which the severe moralist cannot approve of. The rich
+ peasants, for example, have gained their fortune and influence by
+ demoralising and exploiting their weaker brethren, by committing all
+ manner of illegalities, and by bribing the local authorities. Hence they
+ are styled Miroyedy (Commune-devourers) or Kulaki (fists), or something
+ equally uncomplimentary. Once this view is adopted, it follows logically
+ that the Communal institutions, in so far as they form a barrier to the
+ activity of such persons, ought to be carefully preserved. This idea
+ underlies nearly all the arguments in favour of the Commune, and explains
+ why they are so popular. Russians of all classes have, in fact, a leaning
+ towards socialistic notions, and very little sympathy with our belief in
+ individual initiative and unrestricted competition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even if it be admitted that the Commune may effectually prevent the
+ formation of an agricultural Proletariat, the question is thereby only
+ half answered. Russia aspires to become a great industrial and commercial
+ country, and accordingly her town population is rapidly augmenting. We
+ have still to consider, then, how the Commune affects the Proletariat of
+ the towns. In Western Europe the great centres of industry have uprooted
+ from the soil and collected in the towns a great part of the rural
+ population. Those who yielded to this attractive influence severed all
+ connection with their native villages, became unfit for field labour, and
+ were transformed into artisans or factory-workers. In Russia this
+ transformation could not easily take place. The peasant might work during
+ the greater part of his life in the towns, but he did not thereby sever
+ his connection with his native village. He remained, whether he desired it
+ or not, a member of the Commune, possessing a share of the Communal land,
+ and liable for a share of the Communal burdens. During his residence in
+ the town his wife and family remained at home, and thither he himself
+ sooner or later returned. In this way a class of hybrids&mdash;half-peasants,
+ half-artisans&mdash;has been created, and the formation of a town
+ Proletariat has been greatly retarded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The existence of this hybrid class is commonly cited as a beneficent
+ result of the Communal institutions. The artisans and factory labourers,
+ it is said, have thus always a home to which they can retire when thrown
+ out of work or overtaken by old age, and their children are brought up in
+ the country, instead of being reared among the debilitating influences of
+ overcrowded cities. Every common labourer has, in short, by this ingenious
+ contrivance, some small capital and a country residence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the present transitional state of Russian society this peculiar
+ arrangement is at once natural and convenient, but amidst its advantages
+ it has many serious defects. The unnatural separation of the artisan from
+ his wife and family leads to very undesirable results, well known to all
+ who are familiar with the details of peasant life in the northern
+ provinces. And whatever its advantages and defects may be, it cannot be
+ permanently retained. At the present time native industry is still in its
+ infancy. Protected by the tariff from foreign competition, and too few in
+ number to produce a strong competition among themselves, the existing
+ factories can give to their owners a large revenue without any strenuous
+ exertion. Manufacturers can therefore allow themselves many little
+ liberties, which would be quite inadmissible if the price of manufactured
+ goods were lowered by brisk competition. Ask a Lancashire manufacturer if
+ he could allow a large portion of his workers to go yearly to Cornwall or
+ Caithness to mow a field of hay or reap a few acres of wheat or oats! And
+ if Russia is to make great industrial progress, the manufacturers of
+ Moscow, Lodz, Ivanovo, and Shui will some day be as hard pressed as are
+ those of Bradford and Manchester. The invariable tendency of modern
+ industry, and the secret of its progress, is the ever-increasing division
+ of labour; and how can this principle be applied if the artisans insist on
+ remaining agriculturists?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interests of agriculture, too, are opposed to the old system.
+ Agriculture cannot be expected to make progress, or even to be tolerably
+ productive, if it is left in great measure to women and children. At
+ present it is not desirable that the link which binds the factory-worker
+ or artisan with the village should be at once severed, for in the
+ neighbourhood of the large factories there is often no proper
+ accommodation for the families of the workers, and agriculture, as at
+ present practised, can be carried on successfully though the Head of the
+ Household happens to be absent. But the system must be regarded as simply
+ temporary, and the disruption of large families&mdash;a phenomenon of
+ which I have already spoken&mdash;renders its application more and more
+ difficult.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ FINNISH AND TARTAR VILLAGES
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ A Finnish Tribe&mdash;Finnish Villages&mdash;Various Stages of
+ Russification&mdash;Finnish Women&mdash;Finnish Religions&mdash;Method of
+ "Laying" Ghosts&mdash;Curious Mixture of Christianity and Paganism&mdash;Conversion
+ of the Finns&mdash;A Tartar Village&mdash;A Russian Peasant's Conception
+ of Mahometanism&mdash;A Mahometan's View of Christianity&mdash;Propaganda&mdash;The
+ Russian Colonist&mdash;Migrations of Peoples During the Dark Ages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When talking one day with a landed proprietor who lived near Ivanofka, I
+ accidentally discovered that in a district at some distance to the
+ northeast there were certain villages the inhabitants of which did not
+ understand Russian, and habitually used a peculiar language of their own.
+ With an illogical hastiness worthy of a genuine ethnologist, I at once
+ assumed that these must be the remnants of some aboriginal race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Des aborigenes!" I exclaimed, unable to recall the Russian equivalent for
+ the term, and knowing that my friend understood French. "Doubtless the
+ remains of some ancient race who formerly held the country, and are now
+ rapidly disappearing. Have you any Aborigines Protection Society in this
+ part of the world?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My friend had evidently great difficulty in imagining what an Aborigines
+ Protection Society could be, and promptly assured me that there was
+ nothing of the kind in Russia. On being told that such a society might
+ render valuable services by protecting the weaker against the stronger
+ race, and collecting important materials for the new science of Social
+ Embryology, he looked thoroughly mystified. As to the new science, he had
+ never heard of it, and as to protection, he thought that the inhabitants
+ of the villages in question were quite capable of protecting themselves.
+ "I could invent," he added, with a malicious smile, "a society for the
+ protection of ALL peasants, but I am quite sure that the authorities would
+ not allow me to carry out my idea."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My ethnological curiosity was thoroughly aroused, and I endeavoured to
+ awaken a similar feeling in my friend by hinting that we had at hand a
+ promising field for discoveries which might immortalise the fortunate
+ explorers; but my efforts were in vain. The old gentleman was a portly,
+ indolent man, of phlegmatic temperament, who thought more of comfort than
+ of immortality in the terrestrial sense of the term. To my proposal that
+ we should start at once on an exploring expedition, he replied calmly that
+ the distance was considerable, that the roads were muddy, and that there
+ was nothing to be learned. The villages in question were very like other
+ villages, and their inhabitants lived, to all intents and purposes, in the
+ same way as their Russian neighbours. If they had any secret peculiarities
+ they would certainly not divulge them to a stranger, for they were
+ notoriously silent, gloomy, morose, and uncommunicative. Everything that
+ was known about them, my friend assured me, might be communicated in a few
+ words. They belonged to a Finnish tribe called Korelli, and had been
+ transported to their present settlements in comparatively recent times. In
+ answer to my questions as to how, when, and by whom they had been
+ transported thither my informant replied that it had been the work of Ivan
+ the Terrible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though I knew at that time little of Russian history, I suspected that the
+ last assertion was invented on the spur of the moment, in order to satisfy
+ my troublesome curiosity, and accordingly I determined not to accept it
+ without verification. The result showed how careful the traveller should
+ be in accepting the testimony of "intelligent, well-informed natives." On
+ further investigation I discovered, not only that the story about Ivan the
+ Terrible was a pure invention&mdash;whether of my friend or of the popular
+ imagination, which always uses heroic names as pegs on which to hang
+ traditions, I know not&mdash;but also that my first theory was correct.
+ These Finnish peasants turned out to be a remnant of the aborigines, or at
+ least of the oldest known inhabitants of the district. Men of the same
+ race, but bearing different tribal names, such as Finns, Korelli,
+ Tcheremiss, Tchuvash, Mordva, Votyaks, Permyaks, Zyryanye, Voguls, are to
+ be found in considerable numbers all over the northern provinces, from the
+ Gulf of Bothnia to Western Siberia, as well as in the provinces bordering
+ the Middle Volga as far south as Penza, Simbirsk, and Tamboff.* The
+ Russian peasants, who now compose the great mass of the population, are
+ the intruders.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The semi-official "Statesman's Handbook for Russia,"
+ published in 1896, enumerates fourteen different tribes,
+ with an aggregate of about 4,650,000 souls, but these
+ numbers must not be regarded as having any pretensions to
+ accuracy. The best authorities differ widely in their
+ estimates.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I had long taken a deep interest in what learned Germans call the
+ Volkerwanderung&mdash;that is to say, the migrations of peoples during the
+ gradual dissolution of the Roman Empire, and it had often occurred to me
+ that the most approved authorities, who had expended an infinite amount of
+ learning on the subject, had not always taken the trouble to investigate
+ the nature of the process. It is not enough to know that a race or tribe
+ extended its dominions or changed its geographical position. We ought at
+ the same time to inquire whether it expelled, exterminated, or absorbed
+ the former inhabitants, and how the expulsion, extermination, or
+ absorption was effected. Now of these three processes, absorption may have
+ been more frequent than is commonly supposed, and it seemed to me that in
+ Northern Russia this process might be conveniently studied. A thousand
+ years ago the whole of Northern Russia was peopled by Finnish pagan
+ tribes, and at the present day the greater part of it is occupied by
+ peasants who speak the language of Moscow, profess the Orthodox faith,
+ present in their physiognomy no striking peculiarities, and appear to the
+ superficial observer pure Russians. And we have no reason to suppose that
+ the former inhabitants were expelled or exterminated, or that they
+ gradually died out from contact with the civilisation and vices of a
+ higher race. History records no wholesale Finnish migrations like that of
+ the Kalmyks, and no war of extermination; and statistics prove that among
+ the remnants of those primitive races the population increases as rapidly
+ as among the Russian peasantry.* From these facts I concluded that the
+ Finnish aborigines had been simply absorbed, or rather, were being
+ absorbed, by the Slavonic intruders.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This latter statement is made on the authority of Popoff
+ ("Zyryanye i zyryanski krai," Moscow, 1874) and
+ Tcheremshanski ("Opisanie Orenburgskoi Gubernii," Ufa,
+ 1859).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This conclusion has since been confirmed by observation. During my
+ wanderings in these northern provinces I have found villages in every
+ stage of Russification. In one, everything seemed thoroughly Finnish: the
+ inhabitants had a reddish-olive skin, very high cheek-bones, obliquely set
+ eyes, and a peculiar costume; none of the women, and very few of the men,
+ could understand Russian, and any Russian who visited the place was
+ regarded as a foreigner. In a second, there were already some Russian
+ inhabitants; the others had lost something of their pure Finnish type,
+ many of the men had discarded the old costume and spoke Russian fluently,
+ and a Russian visitor was no longer shunned. In a third, the Finnish type
+ was still further weakened: all the men spoke Russian, and nearly all the
+ women understood it; the old male costume had entirely disappeared, and
+ the old female costume was rapidly following it; while intermarriage with
+ the Russian population was no longer rare. In a fourth, intermarriage had
+ almost completely done its work, and the old Finnish element could be
+ detected merely in certain peculiarities of physiognomy and
+ pronunciation.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * One of the most common peculiarities of pronunciation is
+ the substitution of the sound of ts for that of tch, which I
+ found almost universal over a large area.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The process of Russification may be likewise observed in the manner of
+ building the houses and in the methods of farming, which show plainly that
+ the Finnish races did not obtain rudimentary civilisation from the Slavs.
+ Whence, then, was it derived? Was it obtained from some other race, or is
+ it indigenous? These are questions which I have no means of answering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Positivist poet&mdash;or if that be a contradiction in terms, let us say
+ a Positivist who wrote verses&mdash;once composed an appeal to the fair
+ sex, beginning with the words:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pourquoi, O femmes, restez-vous en arriere?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question might have been addressed to the women in these Finnish
+ villages. Like their sisters in France, they are much more conservative
+ than the men, and oppose much more stubbornly the Russian influence. On
+ the other hand, like women in general, when they do begin to change, they
+ change more rapidly. This is seen especially in the matter of costume. The
+ men adopt the Russian costume very gradually; the women adopt it at once.
+ As soon as a single woman gets a gaudy Russian dress, every other woman in
+ the village feels envious and impatient till she has done likewise. I
+ remember once visiting a Mordva village when this critical point had been
+ reached, and a very characteristic incident occurred. In the preceding
+ villages through which I had passed I had tried in vain to buy a female
+ costume, and I again made the attempt. This time the result was very
+ different. A few minutes after I had expressed my wish to purchase a
+ costume, the house in which I was sitting was besieged by a great crowd of
+ women, holding in their hands articles of wearing apparel. In order to
+ make a selection I went out into the crowd, but the desire to find a
+ purchaser was so general and so ardent that I was regularly mobbed. The
+ women, shouting "Kupi! kupi!" ("Buy! buy!"), and struggling with each
+ other to get near me, were so importunate that I had at last to take
+ refuge in the house, to prevent my own costume from being torn to shreds.
+ But even there I was not safe, for the women followed at my heels, and a
+ considerable amount of good-natured violence had to be employed to expel
+ the intruders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is especially interesting to observe the transformation of nationality
+ in the sphere of religious conceptions. The Finns remained pagans long
+ after the Russians had become Christians, but at the present time the
+ whole population, from the eastern boundary of Finland proper to the Ural
+ Mountains, are officially described as members of the Greek Orthodox
+ Church. The manner in which this change of religion was effected is well
+ worthy of attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old religion of the Finnish tribes, if we may judge from the fragments
+ which still remain, had, like the people themselves, a thoroughly
+ practical, prosaic character. Their theology consisted not of abstract
+ dogmas, but merely of simple prescriptions for the ensuring of material
+ welfare. Even at the present day, in the districts not completely
+ Russified, their prayers are plain, unadorned requests for a good harvest,
+ plenty of cattle, and the like, and are expressed in a tone of childlike
+ familiarity that sounds strange in our ears. They make no attempt to veil
+ their desires with mystic solemnity, but ask, in simple, straightforward
+ fashion, that God should make the barley ripen and the cow calve
+ successfully, that He should prevent their horses from being stolen, and
+ that he should help them to gain money to pay their taxes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their religious ceremonies have, so far as I have been able to discover,
+ no hidden mystical signification, and are for the most part rather magical
+ rites for averting the influence of malicious spirits, or freeing
+ themselves from the unwelcome visits of their departed relatives. For this
+ latter purpose many even of those who are officially Christians proceed at
+ stated seasons to the graveyards and place an abundant supply of cooked
+ food on the graves of their relations who have recently died, requesting
+ the departed to accept this meal, and not to return to their old homes,
+ where their presence is no longer desired. Though more of the food is
+ eaten at night by the village dogs than by the famished spirits, the
+ custom is believed to have a powerful influence in preventing the dead
+ from wandering about at night and frightening the living. If it be true,
+ as I am inclined to believe, that tombstones were originally used for
+ keeping the dead in their graves, then it must be admitted that in the
+ matter of "laying" ghosts the Finns have shown themselves much more humane
+ than other races. It may, however, be suggested that in the original home
+ of the Finns&mdash;"le berceau de la race," as French ethnologists say&mdash;stones
+ could not easily be procured, and that the custom of feeding the dead was
+ adopted as a pis aller. The decision of the question must be left to those
+ who know where the original home of the Finns was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the Russian peasantry, knowing little or nothing of theology, and
+ placing implicit confidence in rites and ceremonies, did not differ very
+ widely from the pagan Finns in the matter of religious conceptions, the
+ friendly contact of the two races naturally led to a curious blending of
+ the two religions. The Russians adopted many customs from the Finns, and
+ the Finns adopted still more from the Russians. When Yumala and the other
+ Finnish deities did not do as they were desired, their worshippers
+ naturally applied for protection or assistance to the Madonna and the
+ "Russian God." If their own traditional magic rites did not suffice to
+ ward off evil influences, they naturally tried the effect of crossing
+ themselves, as the Russians do in moments of danger. All this may seem
+ strange to us who have been taught from our earliest years that religion
+ is something quite different from spells, charms, and incantations, and
+ that of all the various religions in the world one alone is true, all the
+ others being false. But we must remember that the Finns have had a very
+ different education. They do not distinguish religion from magic rites,
+ and they have never been taught that other religions are less true than
+ their own. For them the best religion is the one which contains the most
+ potent spells, and they see no reason why less powerful religions should
+ not be blended therewith. Their deities are not jealous gods, and do not
+ insist on having a monopoly of devotion; and in any case they cannot do
+ much injury to those who have placed themselves under the protection of a
+ more powerful divinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This simple-minded eclecticism often produces a singular mixture of
+ Christianity and paganism. Thus, for instance, at the harvest festivals,
+ Tchuvash peasants have been known to pray first to their own deities, and
+ then to St. Nicholas, the miracle-worker, who is the favourite saint of
+ the Russian peasantry. Such dual worship is sometimes even recommended by
+ the Yomzi&mdash;a class of men who correspond to the medicine-men among
+ the Red Indians&mdash;and the prayers are on these occasions couched in
+ the most familiar terms. Here is a specimen given by a Russian who has
+ specially studied the language and customs of this interesting people:*
+ "Look here, O Nicholas-god! Perhaps my neighbour, little Michael, has been
+ slandering me to you, or perhaps he will do so. If he does, don't believe
+ him. I have done him no ill, and wish him none. He is a worthless boaster
+ and a babbler. He does not really honour you, and merely plays the
+ hypocrite. But I honour you from my heart; and, behold, I place a taper
+ before you!" Sometimes incidents occur which display a still more curious
+ blending of the two religions. Thus a Tcheremiss, on one occasion, in
+ consequence of a serious illness, sacrificed a young foal to our Lady of
+ Kazan!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Mr. Zolotnitski, "Tchuvasko-russki slovar," p. 167.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Though the Finnish beliefs affected to some extent the Russian peasantry,
+ the Russian faith ultimately prevailed. This can be explained without
+ taking into consideration the inherent superiority of Christianity over
+ all forms of paganism. The Finns had no organised priesthood, and
+ consequently never offered a systematic opposition to the new faith; the
+ Russians, on the contrary, had a regular hierarchy in close alliance with
+ the civil administration. In the principal villages Christian churches
+ were built, and some of the police-officers vied with the ecclesiastical
+ officials in the work of making converts. At the same time there were
+ other influences tending in the same direction. If a Russian practised
+ Finnish superstitions he exposed himself to disagreeable consequences of a
+ temporal kind; if, on the contrary, a Finn adopted the Christian religion,
+ the temporal consequences that could result were all advantageous to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of the Finns gradually became Christians almost unconsciously. The
+ ecclesiastical authorities were extremely moderate in their demands. They
+ insisted on no religious knowledge, and merely demanded that the converts
+ should be baptised. The converts, failing to understand the spiritual
+ significance of the ceremony, commonly offered no resistance, so long as
+ the immersion was performed in summer. So little repugnance, indeed, did
+ they feel, that on some occasions, when a small reward was given to those
+ who consented, some of the new converts wished the ceremony to be repeated
+ several times. The chief objection to receiving the Christian faith lay in
+ the long and severe fasts imposed by the Greek Orthodox Church; but this
+ difficulty was overcome by assuming that they need not be strictly
+ observed. At first, in some districts, it was popularly believed that the
+ Icons informed the Russian priests against those who did not fast as the
+ Church prescribed; but experience gradually exploded this theory. Some of
+ the more prudent converts, however, to prevent all possible tale-telling,
+ took the precaution of turning the face of the Icon to the wall when
+ prohibited meats were about to be eaten!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This gradual conversion of the Finnish tribes, effected without any
+ intellectual revolution in the minds of the converts, had very important
+ temporal consequences. Community of faith led to intermarriage, and
+ intermarriage led rapidly to the blending of the two races.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we compare a Finnish village in any stage of Russification with a
+ Tartar village, of which the inhabitants are Mahometans, we cannot fail to
+ be struck by the contrast. In the latter, though there may be many
+ Russians, there is no blending of the two races. Between them religion has
+ raised an impassable barrier. There are many villages in the eastern and
+ north-eastern provinces of European Russia which have been for generations
+ half Tartar and half Russian, and the amalgamation of the two
+ nationalities has not yet begun. Near the one end stands the Christian
+ church, and near the other stands the little metchet, or Mahometan house
+ of prayer. The whole village forms one Commune, with one Village Assembly
+ and one Village Elder; but, socially, it is composed of two distinct
+ communities, each possessing its peculiar customs and peculiar mode of
+ life. The Tartar may learn Russian, but he does not on that account become
+ Russianised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must not, however, be supposed that the two races are imbued with
+ fanatical hatred towards each other. On the contrary, they live in perfect
+ good-fellowship, elect as Village Elder sometimes a Russian and sometimes
+ a Tartar, and discuss the Communal affairs in the Village Assembly without
+ reference to religious matters. I know one village where the
+ good-fellowship went even a step farther: the Christians determined to
+ repair their church, and the Mahometans helped them to transport wood for
+ the purpose! All this tends to show that under a tolerably good
+ Government, which does not favour one race at the expense of the other,
+ Mahometan Tartars and Christian Slavs can live peaceably together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The absence of fanaticism and of that proselytising zeal which is one of
+ the most prolific sources of religious hatred, is to be explained by the
+ peculiar religious conceptions of these peasants. In their minds religion
+ and nationality are so closely allied as to be almost identical. The
+ Russian is, as it were, by nature a Christian, and the Tartar a Mahometan;
+ and it never occurs to any one in these villages to disturb the appointed
+ order of nature. On this subject I had once an interesting conversation
+ with a Russian peasant who had been for some time living among Tartars. In
+ reply to my question as to what kind of people the Tartars were, he
+ replied laconically, "Nitchevo"&mdash;that is to say, "nothing in
+ particular"; and on being pressed for a more definite expression of
+ opinion, he admitted that they were very good people indeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what kind of faith have they?" I continued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A good enough faith," was the prompt reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is it better than the faith of the Molokanye?" The Molokanye are Russian
+ sectarians&mdash;closely resembling Scotch Presbyterians&mdash;of whom I
+ shall have more to say in the sequel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course it is better than the Molokan faith."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed!" I exclaimed, endeavouring to conceal my astonishment at this
+ strange judgment. "Are the Molokanye, then, very bad people?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at all. The Molokanye are good and honest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, then, do you think their faith is so much worse than that of the
+ Mahometans?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How shall I tell you?" The peasant here paused as if to collect his
+ thoughts, and then proceeded slowly, "The Tartars, you see, received their
+ faith from God as they received the colour of their skins, but the
+ Molokanye are Russians who have invented a faith out of their own heads!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This singular answer scarcely requires a commentary. As it would be absurd
+ to try to make Tartars change the colour of their skins, so it would be
+ absurd to try to make them change their religion. Besides this, such an
+ attempt would be an unjustifiable interference with the designs of
+ Providence, for, in the peasant's opinion, God gave Mahometanism to the
+ Tartars just as he gave the Orthodox faith to the Russians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ecclesiastical authorities do not formally adopt this strange theory,
+ but they generally act in accordance with it. There is little official
+ propaganda among the Mahometan subjects of the Tsar, and it is well that
+ it is so, for an energetic propaganda would lead merely to the stirring up
+ of any latent hostility which may exist deep down in the nature of the two
+ races, and it would not make any real converts. The Tartars cannot
+ unconsciously imbibe Christianity as the Finns have done. Their religion
+ is not a rude, simple paganism without theology in the scholastic sense of
+ the term, but a monotheism as exclusive as Christianity itself. Enter into
+ conversation with an intelligent man who has no higher religious belief
+ than a rude sort of paganism, and you may, if you know him well and make a
+ judicious use of your knowledge, easily interest him in the touching story
+ of Christ's life and teaching. And in these unsophisticated natures there
+ is but one step from interest and sympathy to conversion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Try the same method with a Mussulman, and you will soon find that all your
+ efforts are fruitless. He has already a theology and a prophet of his own,
+ and sees no reason why he should exchange them for those which you have to
+ offer. Perhaps he will show you more or less openly that he pities your
+ ignorance and wonders that you have not been able to ADVANCE from
+ Christianity to Mahometanism. In his opinion&mdash;I am supposing that he
+ is a man of education&mdash;Moses and Christ were great prophets in their
+ day, and consequently he is accustomed to respect their memory; but he is
+ profoundly convinced that however appropriate they were for their own
+ times, they have been entirely superseded by Mahomet, precisely as we
+ believe that Judaism was superseded by Christianity. Proud of his superior
+ knowledge, he regards you as a benighted polytheist, and may perhaps tell
+ you that the Orthodox Christians with whom he comes in contact have three
+ Gods and a host of lesser deities called saints, that they pray to idols
+ called Icons, and that they keep their holy days by getting drunk. In vain
+ you endeavour to explain to him that saints and Icons are not essential
+ parts of Christianity, and that habits of intoxication have no religious
+ significance. On these points he may make concessions to you, but the
+ doctrine of the Trinity remains for him a fatal stumbling-block. "You
+ Christians," he will say, "once had a great prophet called Jisous, who is
+ mentioned with respect in the Koran, but you falsified your sacred
+ writings and took to worshipping him, and now you declare that he is the
+ equal of Allah. Far from us be such blasphemy! There is but one God, and
+ Mahomet is His prophet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A worthy Christian missionary, who had laboured long and zealously among a
+ Mussulman population, once called me sharply to account for having
+ expressed the opinion that Mahometans are very rarely converted to
+ Christianity. When I brought him down from the region of vague general
+ statements and insisted on knowing how many cases he had met with in his
+ own personal experience during sixteen years of missionary work, he was
+ constrained to admit that he had know only one: and when I pressed him
+ farther as to the disinterested sincerity of the convert in question his
+ reply was not altogether satisfactory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The policy of religious non-intervention has not always been practised by
+ the Government. Soon after the conquest of the Khanate of Kazan in the
+ sixteenth century, the Tsars of Muscovy attempted to convert their new
+ subjects from Mahometanism to Christianity. The means employed were partly
+ spiritual and partly administrative, but the police-officers seem to have
+ played a more important part than the clergy. In this way a certain number
+ of Tartars were baptised; but the authorities were obliged to admit that
+ the new converts "shamelessly retain many horrid Tartar customs, and
+ neither hold nor know the Christian faith." When spiritual exhortations
+ failed, the Government ordered its officials to "pacify, imprison, put in
+ irons, and thereby UNTEACH and frighten from the Tartar faith those who,
+ though baptised, do not obey the admonitions of the Metropolitan." These
+ energetic measures proved as ineffectual as the spiritual exhortations;
+ and Catherine II. adopted a new method, highly characteristic of her
+ system of administration. The new converts&mdash;who, be it remembered,
+ were unable to read and write&mdash;were ordered by Imperial ukaz to sign
+ a written promise to the effect that "they would completely forsake their
+ infidel errors, and, avoiding all intercourse with unbelievers, would hold
+ firmly and unwaveringly the Christian faith and its dogmas"*&mdash;of
+ which latter, we may add, they had not the slightest knowledge. The
+ childlike faith in the magical efficacy of stamped paper here displayed
+ was not justified. The so-called "baptised Tartars" are at the present
+ time as far from being Christians as they were in the sixteenth century.
+ They cannot openly profess Mahometanism, because men who have been once
+ formally admitted into the National Church cannot leave it without
+ exposing themselves to the severe pains and penalties of the criminal
+ code, but they strongly object to be Christianised.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * "Ukaz Kazanskoi dukhovnoi Konsistorii." Anno 1778.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On this subject I have found a remarkable admission in a semiofficial
+ article, published as recently as 1872.* "It is a fact worthy of
+ attention," says the writer, "that a long series of evident apostasies
+ coincides with the beginning of measures to confirm the converts in the
+ Christian faith. There must be, therefore, some collateral cause producing
+ those cases of apostasy precisely at the moment when the contrary might be
+ expected." There is a delightful naivete in this way of stating the fact.
+ The mysterious cause vaguely indicated is not difficult to find. So long
+ as the Government demanded merely that the supposed converts should be
+ inscribed as Christians in the official registers, there was no official
+ apostasy; but as soon as active measures began to be taken "to confirm the
+ converts," a spirit of hostility and fanaticism appeared among the
+ Mussulman population, and made those who were inscribed as Christians
+ resist the propaganda.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * "Zhurnal Ministerstva Narodnago Prosveshtcheniya." June,
+ 1872.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It may safely be said that Christians are impervious to Islam, and genuine
+ Mussulmans impervious to Christianity; but between the two there are
+ certain tribes, or fractions of tribes, which present a promising field
+ for missionary enterprise. In this field the Tartars show much more zeal
+ than the Russians, and possess certain advantages over their rivals. The
+ tribes of Northeastern Russia learn Tartar much more easily than Russian,
+ and their geographical position and modes of life bring them in contact
+ with Russians much less than with Tartars. The consequence is that whole
+ villages of Tcheremiss and Votiaks, officially inscribed as belonging to
+ the Greek Orthodox Church, have openly declared themselves Mahometans; and
+ some of the more remarkable conversions have been commemorated by popular
+ songs, which are sung by young and old. Against this propaganda the
+ Orthodox ecclesiastical authorities do little or nothing. Though the
+ criminal code contains severe enactments against those who fall away from
+ the Orthodox Church, and still more against those who produce apostasy,*
+ the enactments are rarely put in force. Both clergy and laity in the
+ Russian Church are, as a rule, very tolerant where no political questions
+ are involved. The parish priest pays attention to apostasy only when it
+ diminishes his annual revenues, and this can be easily avoided by the
+ apostate's paying a small yearly sum. If this precaution be taken, whole
+ villages may be converted to Islam without the higher ecclesiastical
+ authorities knowing anything of the matter.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * A person convicted of converting a Christian to Islamism
+ is sentenced, according to the criminal code (§184), to the
+ loss of all civil rights, and to imprisonment with hard
+ labour for a term varying from eight to ten years.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whether the barrier that separates Christians and Mussulmans in Russia, as
+ elsewhere, will ever be broken down by education, I do not know; but I may
+ remark that hitherto the spread of education among the Tartars has tended
+ rather to imbue them with fanaticism. If we remember that theological
+ education always produces intolerance, and that Tartar education is almost
+ exclusively theological, we shall not be surprised to find that a Tartar's
+ religious fanaticism is generally in direct proportion to the amount of
+ his intellectual culture. The unlettered Tartar, unspoiled by learning
+ falsely so called, and knowing merely enough of his religion to perform
+ the customary ordinances prescribed by the Prophet, is peaceable, kindly,
+ and hospitable towards all men; but the learned Tartar, who has been
+ taught that the Christian is a kiafir (infidel) and a mushrik
+ (polytheist), odious in the sight of Allah, and already condemned to
+ eternal punishment, is as intolerant and fanatical as the most bigoted
+ Roman Catholic or Calvinist. Such fanatics are occasionally to be met with
+ in the eastern provinces, but they are few in number, and have little
+ influence on the masses. From my own experience I can testify that during
+ the whole course of my wanderings I have nowhere received more kindness
+ and hospitality than among the uneducated Mussulman Bashkirs. Even here,
+ however, Islam opposes a strong barrier to Russification.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though no such barrier existed among the pagan Finnish tribes, the work of
+ Russification among them is still, as I have already indicated, far from
+ complete. Not only whole villages, but even many entire districts, are
+ still very little affected by Russian influence. This is to be explained
+ partly by geographical conditions. In regions which have a poor soil, and
+ are intersected by no navigable river, there are few or no Russian
+ settlers, and consequently the Finns have there preserved intact their
+ language and customs; whilst in those districts which present more
+ inducements to colonisation, the Russian population is more numerous, and
+ the Finns less conservative. It must, however, be admitted that
+ geographical conditions do not completely explain the facts. The various
+ tribes, even when placed in the same conditions, are not equally
+ susceptible to foreign influence. The Mordva, for instance, are infinitely
+ less conservative than the Tchuvash. This I have often noticed, and my
+ impression has been confirmed by men who have had more opportunities of
+ observation. For the present we must attribute this to some occult
+ ethnological peculiarity, but future investigations may some day supply a
+ more satisfactory explanation. Already I have obtained some facts which
+ appear to throw light on the subject. The Tchuvash have certain customs
+ which seem to indicate that they were formerly, if not avowed Mahometans,
+ at least under the influence of Islam, whilst we have no reason to suppose
+ that the Mordva ever passed through that school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The absence of religious fanaticism greatly facilitated Russian
+ colonisation in these northern regions, and the essentially peaceful
+ disposition of the Russian peasantry tended in the same direction. The
+ Russian peasant is admirably fitted for the work of peaceful agricultural
+ colonisation. Among uncivilised tribes he is good-natured, long-suffering,
+ conciliatory, capable of bearing extreme hardships, and endowed with a
+ marvellous power of adapting himself to circumstances. The haughty
+ consciousness of personal and national superiority habitually displayed by
+ Englishmen of all ranks when they are brought in contact with races which
+ they look upon as lower in the scale of humanity than themselves, is
+ entirely foreign to his character. He has no desire to rule, and no wish
+ to make the natives hewers of wood and drawers of water. All he desires is
+ a few acres of land which he and his family can cultivate; and so long as
+ he is allowed to enjoy these he is not likely to molest his neighbours.
+ Had the colonists of the Finnish country been men of Anglo-Saxon race,
+ they would in all probability have taken possession of the land and
+ reduced the natives to the condition of agricultural labourers. The
+ Russian colonists have contented themselves with a humbler and less
+ aggressive mode of action; they have settled peaceably among the native
+ population, and are rapidly becoming blended with it. In many districts
+ the so-called Russians have perhaps more Finnish than Slavonic blood in
+ their veins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what has all this to do, it may be asked, with the aforementioned
+ Volkerwanderung, or migration of peoples, during the Dark Ages? More than
+ may at first sight appear. Some of the so-called migrations were, I
+ suspect, not at all migrations in the ordinary sense of the term, but
+ rather gradual changes, such as those which have taken place, and are
+ still taking place, in Northern Russia. A thousand years ago what is now
+ known as the province of Yaroslavl was inhabited by Finns, and now it is
+ occupied by men who are commonly regarded as pure Slavs. But it would be
+ an utter mistake to suppose that the Finns of this district migrated to
+ those more distant regions where they are now to be found. In reality they
+ formerly occupied, as I have said, the whole of Northern Russia, and in
+ the province of Yaroslavl they have been transformed by Slav infiltration.
+ In Central Europe the Slavs may be said in a certain sense to have
+ retreated, for in former times they occupied the whole of Northern Germany
+ as far as the Elbe. But what does the word "retreat" mean in this case? It
+ means probably that the Slays were gradually Teutonised, and then absorbed
+ by the Teutonic race. Some tribes, it is true, swept over a part of Europe
+ in genuine nomadic fashion, and endeavoured perhaps to expel or
+ exterminate the actual possessors of the soil. This kind of migration may
+ likewise be studied in Russia. But I must leave the subject till I come to
+ speak of the southern provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LORD NOVGOROD THE GREAT
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Departure from Ivanofka and Arrival at Novgorod&mdash;The Eastern Half of
+ the Town&mdash;The Kremlin&mdash;An Old Legend&mdash;The Armed Men of Rus&mdash;The
+ Northmen&mdash;Popular Liberty in Novgorod&mdash;The Prince and the
+ Popular Assembly&mdash;Civil Dissensions and Faction-fights&mdash;The
+ Commercial Republic Conquered by the Muscovite Tsars&mdash;Ivan the
+ Terrible&mdash;Present Condition of the Town&mdash;Provincial Society&mdash;Card-playing&mdash;Periodicals&mdash;"Eternal
+ Stillness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Country life in Russia is pleasant enough in summer or in winter, but
+ between summer and winter there is an intermediate period of several weeks
+ when the rain and mud transform a country-house into something very like a
+ prison. To escape this durance vile I determined in the month of October
+ to leave Ivanofka, and chose as my headquarters for the next few months
+ the town of Novgorod&mdash;the old town of that name, not to be confounded
+ with Nizhni Novgorod&mdash;i.e., Lower Novgorod, on the Volga&mdash;where
+ the great annual fair is held.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this choice there were several reasons. I did not wish to go to St.
+ Petersburg or Moscow, because I foresaw that in either of those cities my
+ studies would certainly be interrupted. In a quiet, sleepy provincial town
+ I should have much more chance of coming in contact with people who could
+ not speak fluently any West-European languages, and much better
+ opportunities for studying native life and local administration. Of the
+ provincial capitals, Novgorod was the nearest, and more interesting than
+ most of its rivals; for it has had a curious history, much older than that
+ of St. Petersburg or even of Moscow, and some traces of its former
+ greatness are still visible. Though now a town of third-rate importance&mdash;a
+ mere shadow of its former self&mdash;it still contains about 21,000
+ inhabitants, and is the administrative centre of the large province in
+ which it is situated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About eighty miles before reaching St. Petersburg the Moscow railway
+ crosses the Volkhof, a rapid, muddy river which connects Lake Ilmen with
+ Lake Ladoga. At the point of intersection I got on board a small steamer
+ and sailed up stream towards Lake Ilmen for about fifty miles.* The
+ journey was tedious, for the country was flat and monotonous, and the
+ steamer, though it puffed and snorted inordinately, did not make more than
+ nine knots. Towards sunset Novgorod appeared on the horizon. Seen thus at
+ a distance in the soft twilight, it seemed decidedly picturesque. On the
+ east bank lay the greater part of the town, the sky line of which was
+ agreeably broken by the green roofs and pear-shaped cupolas of many
+ churches. On the opposite bank rose the Kremlin. Spanning the river was a
+ long, venerable stone bridge, half hidden by a temporary wooden one, which
+ was doing duty for the older structure while the latter was being
+ repaired. A cynical fellow-passenger assured me that the temporary
+ structure was destined to become permanent, because it yielded a
+ comfortable revenue to certain officials, but this sinister prediction has
+ not been verified.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The journey would now be made by rail, but the branch line
+ which runs near the bank of the river had not been
+ constructed at that time.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ That part of Novgorod which lies on the eastern bank of the river, and in
+ which I took up my abode for several months, contains nothing that is
+ worthy of special mention. As is the case in most Russian towns, the
+ streets are straight, wide, and ill-paved, and all run parallel or at
+ right angles to each other. At the end of the bridge is a spacious
+ market-place, flanked on one side by the Town-house. Near the other side
+ stand the houses of the Governor and of the chief military authority of
+ the district. The only other buildings of note are the numerous churches,
+ which are mostly small, and offer nothing that is likely to interest the
+ student of architecture. Altogether this part of the town is
+ unquestionably commonplace. The learned archaeologist may detect in it
+ some traces of the distant past, but the ordinary traveller will find
+ little to arrest his attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If now we cross over to the other side of the river, we are at once
+ confronted by something which very few Russian towns possess&mdash;a
+ kremlin, or citadel. This is a large and slightly-elevated enclosure,
+ surrounded by high brick walls, and in part by the remains of a moat.
+ Before the days of heavy artillery these walls must have presented a
+ formidable barrier to any besieging force, but they have long ceased to
+ have any military significance, and are now nothing more than an
+ historical monument. Passing through the gateway which faces the bridge,
+ we find ourselves in a large open space. To the right stands the cathedral&mdash;a
+ small, much-venerated church, which can make no pretensions to
+ architectural beauty&mdash;and an irregular group of buildings containing
+ the consistory and the residence of the Archbishop. To the left is a long
+ symmetrical range of buildings containing the Government offices and the
+ law courts. Midway between this and the cathedral, in the centre of the
+ great open space, stands a colossal monument, composed of a massive
+ circular stone pedestal and an enormous globe, on and around which cluster
+ a number of emblematic and historical figures. This curious monument,
+ which has at least the merit of being original in design, was erected in
+ 1862, in commemoration of Russia's thousandth birthday, and is supposed to
+ represent the history of Russia in general and of Novgorod in particular
+ during the last thousand years. It was placed here because Novgorod is the
+ oldest of Russian towns, and because somewhere in the surrounding country
+ occurred the incident which is commonly recognised as the foundation of
+ the Russian Empire. The incident in question is thus described in the
+ oldest chronicle:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At that time, as the southern Slavonians paid tribute to the Kozars, so
+ the Novgorodian Slavonians suffered from the attacks of the Variags. For
+ some time the Variags exacted tribute from the Novgorodian Slavonians and
+ the neighbouring Finns; then the conquered tribes, by uniting their
+ forces, drove out the foreigners. But among the Slavonians arose strong
+ internal dissensions; the clans rose against each other. Then, for the
+ creation of order and safety, they resolved to call in princes from a
+ foreign land. In the year 862 Slavonic legates went away beyond the sea to
+ the Variag tribe called Rus, and said, 'Our land is great and fruitful,
+ but there is no order in it; come and reign and rule over us.' Three
+ brothers accepted the invitation, and appeared with their armed followers.
+ The eldest of these, Rurik, settled in Novgorod; the second, Sineus, at
+ Byelo-ozero; and the third, Truvor, in Isborsk. From them our land is
+ called Rus. After two years the brothers of Rurik died. He alone began to
+ rule over the Novgorod district, and confided to his men the
+ administration of the principal towns."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This simple legend has given rise to a vast amount of learned controversy,
+ and historical investigators have fought valiantly with each other over
+ the important question, Who were those armed men of Rus? For a long time
+ the commonly received opinion was that they were Normans from Scandinavia.
+ The Slavophils accepted the legend literally in this sense, and
+ constructed upon it an ingenious theory of Russian history. The nations of
+ the West, they said, were conquered by invaders, who seized the country
+ and created the feudal system for their own benefit; hence the history of
+ Western Europe is a long tale of bloody struggles between conquerors and
+ conquered, and at the present day the old enmity still lives in the
+ political rivalry of the different social classes. The Russo-Slavonians,
+ on the contrary, were not conquered, but voluntarily invited a foreign
+ prince to come and rule over them! Hence the whole social and political
+ development of Russia has been essentially peaceful, and the Russian
+ people know nothing of social castes or feudalism. Though this theory
+ afforded some nourishment for patriotic self-satisfaction, it displeased
+ extreme patriots, who did not like the idea that order was first
+ established in their country by men of Teutonic race. These preferred to
+ adopt the theory that Rurik and his companions were Slavonians from the
+ shores of the Baltic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though I devoted to the study of this question more time and labour than
+ perhaps the subject deserved, I have no intention of inviting the reader
+ to follow me through the tedious controversy. Suffice it to say that,
+ after careful consideration, and with all due deference to recent
+ historians, I am inclined to adopt the old theory, and to regard the
+ Normans of Scandinavia as in a certain sense the founders of the Russian
+ Empire. We know from other sources that during the ninth century there was
+ a great exodus from Scandinavia. Greedy of booty, and fired with the
+ spirit of adventure, the Northmen, in their light, open boats, swept along
+ the coasts of Germany, France, Spain, Greece, and Asia Minor, pillaging
+ the towns and villages near the sea, and entering into the heart of the
+ country by means of the rivers. At first they were mere marauders, and
+ showed everywhere such ferocity and cruelty that they came to be regarded
+ as something akin to plagues and famines, and the faithful added a new
+ petition to the Litany, "From the wrath and malice of the Normans, O Lord,
+ deliver us!" But towards the middle of the century the movement changed
+ its character. The raids became military invasions, and the invaders
+ sought to conquer the lands which they had formerly plundered, "ut
+ acquirant sibi spoliando regna quibus possent vivere pace perpetua." The
+ chiefs embraced Christianity, married the daughters or sisters of the
+ reigning princes, and obtained the conquered territories as feudal grants.
+ Thus arose Norman principalities in the Low Countries, in France, in
+ Italy, and in Sicily; and the Northmen, rapidly blending with the native
+ population, soon showed as much political talent as they had formerly
+ shown reckless and destructive valour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would have been strange indeed if these adventurers, who succeeded in
+ reaching Asia Minor and the coasts of North America, should have
+ overlooked Russia, which lay, as it were, at their very doors. The
+ Volkhof, flowing through Novgorod, formed part of a great waterway which
+ afforded almost uninterrupted water-communication between the Baltic and
+ the Black Sea; and we know that some time afterwards the Scandinavians
+ used this route in their journeys to Constantinople. The change which the
+ Scandinavian movement underwent elsewhere is clearly indicated by the
+ Russian chronicles: first, the Variags came as collectors of tribute, and
+ raised so much popular opposition that they were expelled, and then they
+ came as rulers, and settled in the country. Whether they really came on
+ invitation may be doubted, but that they adopted the language, religion,
+ and customs of the native population does not militate against the
+ assertion that they were Normans. On the contrary, we have here rather an
+ additional confirmation, for elsewhere the Normans did likewise. In the
+ North of France they adopted almost at once the French language and
+ religion, and the son and successor of the famous Rollo was sometimes
+ reproached with being more French than Norman.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ *Strinnholm, "Die Vikingerzuge" (Hamburg, 1839), I., p. 135.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Though it is difficult to decide how far the legend is literally true,
+ there can be no possible doubt that the event which it more or less
+ accurately describes had an important influence on Russian history. From
+ that time dates the rapid expansion of the Russo-Slavonians&mdash;a
+ movement that is still going on at the present day. To the north, the
+ east, and the south new principalities were formed and governed by men who
+ all claimed to be descendants of Rurik, and down to the end of the
+ sixteenth century no Russian outside of this great family ever attempted
+ to establish independent sovereignty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For six centuries after the so-called invitation of Rurik the city on the
+ Volkhof had a strange, checkered history. Rapidly it conquered the
+ neighbouring Finnish tribes, and grew into a powerful independent state,
+ with a territory extending to the Gulf of Finland, and northwards to the
+ White Sea. At the same time its commercial importance increased, and it
+ became an outpost of the Hanseatic League. In this work the descendants of
+ Rurik played an important part, but they were always kept in strict
+ subordination to the popular will. Political freedom kept pace with
+ commercial prosperity. What means Rurik employed for establishing and
+ preserving order we know not, but the chronicles show that his successors
+ in Novgorod possessed merely such authority as was freely granted them by
+ the people. The supreme power resided, not in the prince, but in the
+ assembly of the citizens called together in the market-place by the sound
+ of the great bell. This assembly made laws for the prince as well as for
+ the people, entered into alliances with foreign powers, declared war, and
+ concluded peace, imposed taxes, raised troops, and not only elected the
+ magistrates, but also judged and deposed them when it thought fit. The
+ prince was little more than the hired commander of the troops and the
+ president of the judicial administration. When entering on his functions
+ he had to take a solemn oath that he would faithfully observe the ancient
+ laws and usages, and if he failed to fulfil his promise he was sure to be
+ summarily deposed and expelled. The people had an old rhymed proverb,
+ "Koli khud knyaz, tak v gryaz!" "If the prince is bad, into the mud with
+ him!", and they habitually acted according to it. So unpleasant, indeed,
+ was the task of ruling those sturdy, stiff-necked burghers, that some
+ princes refused to undertake it, and others, having tried it for a time,
+ voluntarily laid down their authority and departed. But these frequent
+ depositions and abdications&mdash;as many as thirty took place in the
+ course of a single century&mdash;did not permanently disturb the existing
+ order of things. The descendants of Rurik were numerous, and there were
+ always plenty of candidates for the vacant post. The municipal republic
+ continued to grow in strength and in riches, and during the thirteenth and
+ fourteenth centuries it proudly styled itself "Lord Novgorod the Great"
+ (Gospodin Velilki Novgorod).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then came a change, as all things human change." To the east arose the
+ principality of Moscow&mdash;not an old, rich municipal republic, but a
+ young, vigorous State, ruled by a line of crafty, energetic, ambitious,
+ and unscrupulous princes of the Rurik stock, who were freeing the country
+ from the Tartar yoke and gradually annexing by fair means and foul the
+ neighbouring principalities to their own dominions. At the same time, and
+ in a similar manner, the Lithuanian Princes to the westward united various
+ small principalities and formed a large independent State. Thus Novgorod
+ found itself in a critical position. Under a strong Government it might
+ have held its own against these rivals and successfully maintained its
+ independence, but its strength was already undermined by internal
+ dissensions. Political liberty had led to anarchy. Again and again on that
+ great open space where the national monument now stands, and in the
+ market-place on the other side of the river, scenes of disorder and
+ bloodshed took place, and more than once on the bridge battles were fought
+ by contending factions. Sometimes it was a contest between rival families,
+ and sometimes a struggle between the municipal aristocracy, who sought to
+ monopolise the political power, and the common people, who wished to have
+ a large share in the administration. A State thus divided against itself
+ could not long resist the aggressive tendencies of powerful neighbours.
+ Artful diplomacy could but postpone the evil day, and it required no great
+ political foresight to predict that sooner or later Novgorod must become
+ Lithuanian or Muscovite. The great families inclined to Lithuania, but the
+ popular party and the clergy, disliking Roman Catholicism, looked to
+ Moscow for assistance, and the Grand Princes of Muscovy ultimately won the
+ prize.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The barbarous way in which the Grand Princes effected the annexation shows
+ how thoroughly they had imbibed the spirit of Tartar statesmanship.
+ Thousands of families were transported to Moscow, and Muscovite families
+ put in their places; and when, in spite of this, the old spirit revived,
+ Ivan the Terrible determined to apply the method of physical extermination
+ which he had found so effectual in breaking the power of his own nobles.
+ Advancing with a large army, which met with no resistance, he devastated
+ the country with fire and sword, and during a residence of five weeks in
+ the town he put the inhabitants to death with a ruthless ferocity which
+ has perhaps never been surpassed even by Oriental despots. If those old
+ walls could speak they would have many a horrible tale to tell. Enough has
+ been preserved in the chronicles to give us some idea of this awful time.
+ Monks and priests were subjected to the Tartar punishment called pravezh,
+ which consisted in tying the victim to a stake, and flogging him daily
+ until a certain sum of money was paid for his release. The merchants and
+ officials were tortured with fire, and then thrown from the bridge with
+ their wives and children into the river. Lest any of them should escape by
+ swimming, boatfuls of soldiers despatched those who were not killed by the
+ fall. At the present day there is a curious bubbling immediately below the
+ bridge, which prevents the water from freezing in winter, and according to
+ popular belief this is caused by the spirits of the terrible Tsar's
+ victims. Of those who were murdered in the villages there is no record,
+ but in the town alone no less than 60,000 human beings are said to have
+ been butchered&mdash;an awful hecatomb on the altar of national unity and
+ autocratic power!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This tragic scene, which occurred in 1570, closes the history of Novgorod
+ as an independent State. Its real independence had long since ceased to
+ exist, and now the last spark of the old spirit was extinguished. The
+ Tsars could not suffer even a shadow of political independence to exist
+ within their dominions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the old days, when many Hanseatic merchants annually visited the city,
+ and when the market-place, the bridge, and the Kremlin were often the
+ scene of violent political struggles, Novgorod must have been an
+ interesting place to live in; but now its glory has departed, and in
+ respect of social resources it is not even a first-rate provincial town.
+ Kief, Kharkof, and other towns which are situated at a greater distance
+ from the capital, in districts fertile enough to induce the nobles to farm
+ their own land, are in their way little semi-independent centres of
+ civilisation. They contain a theatre, a library, two or three clubs, and
+ large houses belonging to rich landed proprietors, who spend the summer on
+ their estates and come into town for the winter months. These proprietors,
+ together with the resident officials, form a numerous society, and during
+ the winter, dinner-parties, balls, and other social gatherings are by no
+ means infrequent. In Novgorod the society is much more limited. It does
+ not, like Kief, Kharkof, and Kazan, possess a university, and it contains
+ no houses belonging to wealthy nobles. The few proprietors of the province
+ who live on their estates, and are rich enough to spend part of the year
+ in town, prefer St. Petersburg for their winter residence. The society,
+ therefore, is composed exclusively of the officials and of the officers
+ who happen to be quartered in the town or the immediate vicinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the people whose acquaintance I made at Novgorod, I can recall only
+ two men who did not occupy some official position, civil or military. One
+ of these was a retired doctor, who was attempting to farm on scientific
+ principles, and who, I believe, soon afterwards gave up the attempt and
+ migrated elsewhere. The other was a Polish bishop who had been compromised
+ in the insurrection of 1863, and was condemned to live here under police
+ supervision. This latter could scarcely be said to belong to the society
+ of the place; though he sometimes appeared at the unceremonious weekly
+ receptions given by the Governor, and was invariably treated by all
+ present with marked respect, he could not but feel that he was in a false
+ position, and he was rarely or never seen in other houses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The official circle of a town like Novgorod is sure to contain a good many
+ people of average education and agreeable manners, but it is sure to be
+ neither brilliant nor interesting. Though it is constantly undergoing a
+ gradual renovation by the received system of frequently transferring
+ officials from one town to another, it preserves faithfully, in spite of
+ the new blood which it thus receives, its essentially languid character.
+ When a new official arrives he exchanges visits with all the notables, and
+ for a few days he produces quite a sensation in the little community. If
+ he appears at social gatherings he is much talked to, and if he does not
+ appear he is much talked about. His former history is repeatedly narrated,
+ and his various merits and defects assiduously discussed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If he is married, and has brought his wife with him, the field of comment
+ and discussion is very much enlarged. The first time that Madame appears
+ in society she is the "cynosure of neighbouring eyes." Her features, her
+ complexion, her hair, her dress, and her jewellery are carefully noted and
+ criticised. Perhaps she has brought with her, from the capital or from
+ abroad, some dresses of the newest fashion. As soon as this is discovered
+ she at once becomes an object of special curiosity to the ladies, and of
+ envious jealousy to those who regard as a personal grievance the presence
+ of a toilette finer or more fashionable than their own. Her demeanour,
+ too, is very carefully observed. If she is friendly and affable in manner,
+ she is patronised; if she is distant and reserved, she is condemned as
+ proud and pretentious. In either case she is pretty sure to form a close
+ intimacy with some one of the older female residents, and for a few weeks
+ the two ladies are inseparable, till some incautious word or act disturbs
+ the new-born friendship, and the devoted friends become bitter enemies.
+ Voluntarily or involuntarily the husbands get mixed up in the quarrel.
+ Highly undesirable qualities are discovered in the characters of all
+ parties concerned, and are made the subject of unfriendly comment. Then
+ the feud subsides, and some new feud of a similar kind comes to occupy the
+ public attention. Mrs. A. wonders how her friends Mr. and Mrs. B. can
+ afford to lose considerable sums every evening at cards, and suspects that
+ they are getting into debt or starving themselves and their children; in
+ her humble opinion they would do well to give fewer supper-parties, and to
+ refrain from poisoning their guests. The bosom friend to whom this is
+ related retails it directly or indirectly to Mrs. B., and Mrs. B.
+ naturally retaliates. Here is a new quarrel, which for some time affords
+ material for conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When there is no quarrel, there is sure to be a bit of scandal afloat.
+ Though Russian provincial society is not at all prudish, and leans rather
+ to the side of extreme leniency, it cannot entirely overlook les
+ convenances. Madame C. has always a large number of male admirers, and to
+ this there can be no reasonable objection so long as her husband does not
+ complain, but she really parades her preference for Mr. X. at balls and
+ parties a little too conspicuously. Then there is Madame D., with the big
+ dreamy eyes. How can she remain in the place after her husband was killed
+ in a duel by a brother officer? Ostensibly the cause of the quarrel was a
+ trifling incident at the card-table, but every one knows that in reality
+ she was the cause of the deadly encounter. And so on, and so on. In the
+ absence of graver interests society naturally bestows inordinate attention
+ on the private affairs of its members; and quarrelling, backbiting, and
+ scandal-mongery help indolent people to kill the time that hangs heavily
+ on their hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Potent as these instruments are, they are not sufficient to kill all the
+ leisure hours. In the forenoons the gentlemen are occupied with their
+ official duties, whilst the ladies go out shopping or pay visits, and
+ devote any time that remains to their household duties and their children;
+ but the day's work is over about four o'clock, and the long evening
+ remains to be filled up. The siesta may dispose of an hour or an hour and
+ a half, but about seven o'clock some definite occupation has to be found.
+ As it is impossible to devote the whole evening to discussing the ordinary
+ news of the day, recourse is almost invariably had to card-playing, which
+ is indulged in to an extent that we had no conception of in England until
+ Bridge was imported. Hour after hour the Russians of both sexes will sit
+ in a hot room, filled with a constantly-renewed cloud of tobacco-smoke&mdash;in
+ the production of which most of the ladies take part&mdash;and silently
+ play "Preference," "Yarolash," or Bridge. Those who for some reason are
+ obliged to be alone can amuse themselves with "Patience," in which no
+ partner is required. In the other games the stakes are commonly very
+ small, but the sittings are often continued so long that a player may win
+ or lose two or three pounds sterling. It is no unusual thing for gentlemen
+ to play for eight or nine hours at a time. At the weekly club dinners,
+ before coffee had been served, nearly all present used to rush off
+ impatiently to the card-room, and sit there placidly from five o'clock in
+ the afternoon till one or two o'clock in the morning! When I asked my
+ friends why they devoted so much time to this unprofitable occupation,
+ they always gave me pretty much the same answer: "What are we to do? We
+ have been reading or writing official papers all day, and in the evening
+ we like to have a little relaxation. When we come together we have very
+ little to talk about, for we have all read the daily papers and nothing
+ more. The best thing we can do is to sit down at the card-table, where we
+ can spend our time pleasantly, without the necessity of talking."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In addition to the daily papers, some people read the monthly periodicals&mdash;big,
+ thick volumes, containing several serious articles on historical and
+ social subjects, sections of one or two novels, satirical sketches, and a
+ long review of home and foreign politics on the model of those in the
+ Revue des Deux Mondes. Several of these periodicals are very ably
+ conducted, and offer to their readers a large amount of valuable
+ information; but I have noticed that the leaves of the more serious part
+ often remain uncut. The translation of a sensation novel by the latest
+ French or English favourite finds many more readers than an article by an
+ historian or a political economist. As to books, they seem to be very
+ little read, for during all the time I lived in Novgorod I never
+ discovered a bookseller's shop, and when I required books I had to get
+ them sent from St. Petersburg. The local administration, it is true,
+ conceived the idea of forming a museum and circulating library, but in my
+ time the project was never realised. Of all the magnificent projects that
+ are formed in Russia, only a very small percentage come into existence,
+ and these are too often very short-lived. The Russians have learned
+ theoretically what are the wants of the most advanced civilisation, and
+ are ever ready to rush into the grand schemes which their theoretical
+ knowledge suggests; but very few of them really and permanently feel these
+ wants, and consequently the institutions artificially formed to satisfy
+ them very soon languish and die. In the provincial towns the shops for the
+ sale of gastronomic delicacies spring up and flourish, whilst shops for
+ the sale of intellectual food are rarely to be met with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the beginning of December the ordinary monotony of Novgorod life is
+ a little relieved by the annual Provincial Assembly, which sits daily for
+ two or three weeks and discusses the economic wants of the province.*
+ During this time a good many landed proprietors, who habitually live on
+ their estates or in St. Petersburg, collect in the town, and enliven a
+ little the ordinary society. But as Christmas approaches the deputies
+ disperse, and again the town becomes enshrouded in that "eternal
+ stillness" (vetchnaya tishina) which a native poet has declared to be the
+ essential characteristic of Russian provincial life.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Of these Assemblies I shall have more to say when I come
+ to describe the local self-government.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE TOWNS AND THE MERCANTILE CLASSES
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ General Character of Russian Towns&mdash;Scarcity of Towns in Russia&mdash;Why
+ the Urban Element in the Population is so Small&mdash;History of Russian
+ Municipal Institutions&mdash;Unsuccessful Efforts to Create a Tiers-etat&mdash;Merchants,
+ Burghers, and Artisans&mdash;Town Council&mdash;A Rich Merchant&mdash;His
+ House&mdash;His Love of Ostentation&mdash;His Conception of Aristocracy&mdash;Official
+ Decorations&mdash;Ignorance and Dishonesty of the Commercial Classes&mdash;Symptoms
+ of Change.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those who wish to enjoy the illusions produced by scene painting and stage
+ decorations should never go behind the scenes. In like manner he who
+ wishes to preserve the delusion that Russian provincial towns are
+ picturesque should never enter them, but content himself with viewing them
+ from a distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However imposing they may look when seen from the outside, they will be
+ found on closer inspection, with very few exceptions, to be little more
+ than villages in disguise. If they have not a positively rustic, they have
+ at least a suburban, appearance. The streets are straight and wide, and
+ are either miserably paved or not paved at all. Trottoirs are not
+ considered indispensable. The houses are built of wood or brick, generally
+ one-storied, and separated from each other by spacious yards. Many of them
+ do not condescend to turn their facades to the street. The general
+ impression produced is that the majority of the burghers have come from
+ the country, and have brought their country-houses with them. There are
+ few or no shops with merchandise tastefully arranged in the window to
+ tempt the passer-by. If you wish to make purchases you must go to the
+ Gostinny Dvor,* or Bazaar, which consists of long, symmetrical rows of
+ low-roofed, dimly-lighted stores, with a colonnade in front. This is the
+ place where merchants most do congregate, but it presents nothing of that
+ bustle and activity which we are accustomed to associate with commercial
+ life. The shopkeepers stand at their doors or loiter about in the
+ immediate vicinity waiting for customers. From the scarcity of these
+ latter I should say that when sales are effected the profits must be
+ enormous.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * These words mean literally the Guests' Court or Yard. The
+ Ghosti&mdash;a word which is etymologically the same as our
+ "host" and "guest"&mdash;were originally the merchants who traded
+ with other towns or other countries.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the other parts of the town the air of solitude and languor is still
+ more conspicuous. In the great square, or by the side of the promenade&mdash;if
+ the town is fortunate enough to have one&mdash;cows or horses may be seen
+ grazing tranquilly, without being at all conscious of the incongruity of
+ their position. And, indeed, it would be strange if they had any such
+ consciousness, for it does not exist in the minds either of the police or
+ of the inhabitants. At night the streets may be lighted merely with a few
+ oil-lamps, which do little more than render the darkness visible, so that
+ cautious citizens returning home late often provide themselves with
+ lanterns. As late as the sixties the learned historian, Pogodin, then a
+ town-councillor of Moscow, opposed the lighting of the city with gas on
+ the ground that those who chose to go out at night should carry their
+ lamps with them. The objection was overruled, and Moscow is now fairly
+ well lit, but the provincial towns are still far from being on the same
+ level. Some retain their old primitive arrangements, while others enjoy
+ the luxury of electric lighting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scarcity of large towns in Russia is not less remarkable than their
+ rustic appearance. According to the last census (1897) the number of
+ towns, officially so-called, is 1,321, but about three-fifths of them have
+ under 5,000 inhabitants; only 104 have over 25,000, and only 19 over
+ 100,000. These figures indicate plainly that the urban element of the
+ population is relatively small, and it is declared by the official
+ statisticians to be only 14 per cent., as against 72 per cent. in Great
+ Britain, but it is now increasing rapidly. When the first edition of this
+ work was published, in 1877, European Russia in the narrower sense of the
+ term&mdash;excluding Finland, the Baltic Provinces, Lithuania, Poland, and
+ the Caucasus&mdash;had only 11 towns with a population of over 50,000, and
+ now there are 34; that is to say, the number of such towns has more than
+ trebled. In the other portions of the country a similar increase has taken
+ place. The towns which have become important industrial and commercial
+ centres have naturally grown most rapidly. For example, in a period of
+ twelve years (1885-97) the populations of Lodz, of Ekaterinoslaf, of Baku,
+ of Yaroslavl, and of Libau, have more than doubled. In the five largest
+ towns of the Empire&mdash;St. Petersburg, Moscow, Warsaw, Odessa and Lodz&mdash;the
+ aggregate population rose during the same twelve years from 2,423,000 to
+ 3,590,000, or nearly 50 per cent. In ten other towns, with populations
+ varying from 50,000 to 282,000, the aggregate rose from 780,000 to
+ 1,382,000, or about 77 per cent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That Russia should have taken so long to assimilate herself in this
+ respect to Western Europe is to be explained by the geographical and
+ political conditions. Her population was not hemmed in by natural or
+ artificial frontiers strong enough to restrain their expansive tendencies.
+ To the north, the east, and the southeast there was a boundless expanse of
+ fertile, uncultivated land, offering a tempting field for emigration; and
+ the peasantry have ever shown themselves ready to take advantage of their
+ opportunities. Instead of improving their primitive system of agriculture,
+ which requires an enormous area and rapidly exhausts the soil, they have
+ always found it easier and more profitable to emigrate and take possession
+ of the virgin land beyond. Thus the territory&mdash;sometimes with the aid
+ of, and sometimes in spite of, the Government&mdash;has constantly
+ expanded, and has already reached the Polar Ocean, the Pacific, and the
+ northern offshoots of the Himalayas. The little district around the
+ sources of the Dnieper has grown into a mighty empire, comprising
+ one-seventh of the land surface of the globe. Prolific as the Russian race
+ is, its power of reproduction could not keep pace with its territorial
+ expansion, and consequently the country is still very thinly peopled.
+ According to the latest census (1897) in the whole empire there are under
+ 130 millions of inhabitants, and the average density of population is only
+ about fifteen to the English square mile. Even the most densely populated
+ provinces, including Moscow with its 988,610 inhabitants, cannot show more
+ than 189 to the English square mile, whereas England has about 400. A
+ people that has such an abundance of land, and can support itself by
+ agriculture, is not naturally disposed to devote itself to industry, or to
+ congregate in large cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For many generations there were other powerful influences working in the
+ same direction. Of these the most important was serfage, which was not
+ abolished till 1861. That institution, and the administrative system of
+ which it formed an essential part, tended to prevent the growth of the
+ towns by hemming the natural movements of the population. Peasants, for
+ example, who learned trades, and who ought to have drifted naturally into
+ the burgher class, were mostly retained by the master on his estate, where
+ artisans of all sorts were daily wanted, and the few who were sent to seek
+ work in the towns were not allowed to settle there permanently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the insignificance of the Russian towns is to be attributed mainly to
+ two causes. The abundance of land tended to prevent the development of
+ industry, and the little industry which did exist was prevented by serfage
+ from collecting in the towns. But this explanation is evidently
+ incomplete. The same causes existed during the Middle Ages in Central
+ Europe, and yet, in spite of them, flourishing cities grew up and played
+ an important part in the social and political history of Germany. In these
+ cities collected traders and artisans, forming a distinct social class,
+ distinguished from the nobles on the one hand, and the surrounding
+ peasantry on the other, by peculiar occupations, peculiar aims, peculiar
+ intellectual physiognomy, and peculiar moral conceptions. Why did these
+ important towns and this burgher class not likewise come into existence in
+ Russia, in spite of the two preventive causes above mentioned?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To discuss this question fully it would be necessary to enter into certain
+ debated points of mediaeval history. All I can do here is to indicate what
+ seems to me the true explanation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Central Europe, all through the Middle Ages, a perpetual struggle went
+ on between the various political factors of which society was composed,
+ and the important towns were in a certain sense the products of this
+ struggle. They were preserved and fostered by the mutual rivalry of the
+ Sovereign, the Feudal Nobility, and the Church; and those who desired to
+ live by trade or industry settled in them in order to enjoy the protection
+ and immunities which they afforded. In Russia there was never any
+ political struggle of this kind. As soon as the Grand Princes of Moscow,
+ in the sixteenth century, threw off the yoke of the Tartars, and made
+ themselves Tsars of all Russia, their power was irresistible and
+ uncontested. Complete masters of the situation, they organised the country
+ as they thought fit. At first their policy was favourable to the
+ development of the towns. Perceiving that the mercantile and industrial
+ classes might be made a rich source of revenue, they separated them from
+ the peasantry, gave them the exclusive right of trading, prevented the
+ other classes from competing with them, and freed them from the authority
+ of the landed proprietors. Had they carried out this policy in a cautious,
+ rational way, they might have created a rich burgher class; but they acted
+ with true Oriental short-sightedness, and defeated their own purpose by
+ imposing inordinately heavy taxes, and treating the urban population as
+ their serfs. The richer merchants were forced to serve as custom-house
+ officers&mdash;often at a great distance from their domiciles*&mdash;and
+ artisans were yearly summoned to Moscow to do work for the Tsars without
+ remuneration.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Merchants from Yaroslavl, for instance, were sent to
+ Astrakhan to collect the custom-dues.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Besides this, the system of taxation was radically defective, and the
+ members of the local administration, who received no pay and were
+ practically free from control, were merciless in their exactions. In a
+ word, the Tsars used their power so stupidly and so recklessly that the
+ industrial and trading population, instead of fleeing to the towns to
+ secure protection, fled from them to escape oppression. At length this
+ emigration from the towns assumed such dimensions that it was found
+ necessary to prevent it by administrative and legislative measures; and
+ the urban population was legally fixed in the towns as the rural
+ population was fixed to the soil. Those who fled were brought back as
+ runaways, and those who attempted flight a second time were ordered to be
+ flogged and transported to Siberia.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * See the "Ulozhenie" (i.e. the laws of Alexis, father of
+ Peter the Great), chap. xix. 13.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ With the eighteenth century began a new era in the history of the towns
+ and of the urban population. Peter the Great observed, during his travels
+ in Western Europe, that national wealth and prosperity reposed chiefly on
+ the enterprising, educated middle classes, and he attributed the poverty
+ of his own country to the absence of this burgher element. Might not such
+ a class be created in Russia? Peter unhesitatingly assumed that it might,
+ and set himself at once to create it in a simple, straightforward way.
+ Foreign artisans were imported into his dominions and foreign merchants
+ were invited to trade with his subjects; young Russians were sent abroad
+ to learn the useful arts; efforts were made to disseminate practical
+ knowledge by the translation of foreign books and the foundation of
+ schools; all kinds of trade were encouraged, and various industrial
+ enterprises were organised. At the same time the administration of the
+ towns was thoroughly reorganised after the model of the ancient free-towns
+ of Germany. In place of the old organisation, which was a slightly
+ modified form of the rural Commune, they received German municipal
+ institutions, with burgomasters, town councils, courts of justice, guilds
+ for the merchants, trade corporations (tsekhi) for the artisans, and an
+ endless list of instructions regarding the development of trade and
+ industry, the building of hospitals, sanitary precautions, the founding of
+ schools, the dispensation of justice, the organisation of the police, and
+ similar matters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Catherine II. followed in the same track. If she did less for trade and
+ industry, she did more in the way of legislating and writing grandiloquent
+ manifestoes. In the course of her historical studies she had learned, as
+ she proclaims in one of her manifestoes, that "from remotest antiquity we
+ everywhere find the memory of town-builders elevated to the same level as
+ the memory of legislators, and we see that heroes, famous for their
+ victories, hoped by town-building to give immortality to their names." As
+ the securing of immortality for her own name was her chief aim in life,
+ she acted in accordance with historical precedent, and created 216 towns
+ in the short space of twenty-three years. This seems a great work, but it
+ did not satisfy her ambition. She was not only a student of history, but
+ was at the same time a warm admirer of the fashionable political
+ philosophy of her time. That philosophy paid much attention to the
+ tiers-etat, which was then acquiring in France great political importance,
+ and Catherine thought that as she had created a Noblesse on the French
+ model, she might also create a bourgeoisie. For this purpose she modified
+ the municipal organisation created by her great predecessor, and granted
+ to all the towns an Imperial Charter. This charter remained without
+ essential modification until the publication of the new Municipality Law
+ in 1870.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The efforts of the Government to create a rich, intelligent tiers-etat
+ were not attended with much success. Their influence was always more
+ apparent in official documents than in real life. The great mass of the
+ population remained serfs, fixed to the soil, whilst the nobles&mdash;that
+ is to say, all who possessed a little education&mdash;were required for
+ the military and civil services. Those who were sent abroad to learn the
+ useful arts learned little, and made little use of the knowledge which
+ they acquired. On their return to their native country they very soon fell
+ victims to the soporific influence of the surrounding social atmosphere.
+ The "town-building" had as little practical result. It was an easy matter
+ to create any number of towns in the official sense of the term. To
+ transform a village into a town, it was necessary merely to prepare an
+ izba, or log-house, for the district court, another for the police-office,
+ a third for the prison, and so on. On an appointed day the Governor of the
+ province arrived in the village, collected the officials appointed to
+ serve in the newly-constructed or newly-arranged log-houses, ordered a
+ simple religious ceremony to be performed by the priest, caused a formal
+ act to be drawn up, and then declared the town to be "opened." All this
+ required very little creative effort; to create a spirit of commercial and
+ industrial enterprise among the population was a more difficult matter and
+ could not be effected by Imperial ukaz.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To animate the newly-imported municipal institutions, which had no root in
+ the traditions and habits of the people, was a task of equal difficulty.
+ In the West these institutions had been slowly devised in the course of
+ centuries to meet real, keenly-felt, practical wants. In Russia they were
+ adopted for the purpose of creating those wants which were not yet felt.
+ Let the reader imagine our Board of Trade supplying the masters of
+ fishing-smacks with accurate charts, learned treatises on navigation, and
+ detailed instructions for the proper ventilation of ships' cabins, and he
+ will have some idea of the effect which Peter's legislation had upon the
+ towns. The office-bearers, elected against their will, were hopelessly
+ bewildered by the complicated procedure, and were incapable of
+ understanding the numerous ukazes which prescribed to them their
+ multifarious duties and threatened the most merciless punishments for sins
+ of omission and commission. Soon, however, it was discovered that the
+ threats were not nearly so dreadful as they seemed; and accordingly those
+ municipal authorities who were to protect and enlighten the burghers,
+ "forgot the fear of God and the Tsar," and extorted so unblushingly that
+ it was found necessary to place them under the control of Government
+ officials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief practical result of the efforts made by Peter and Catherine to
+ create a bourgeoisie was that the inhabitants of the towns were more
+ systematically arranged in categories for the purpose of taxation, and
+ that the taxes were increased. All those parts of the new administration
+ which had no direct relation to the fiscal interests of the Government had
+ very little vitality in them. The whole system had been arbitrarily
+ imposed on the people, and had as motive only the Imperial will. Had that
+ motive power been withdrawn and the burghers left to regulate their own
+ municipal affairs, the system would immediately have collapsed. Rathhaus,
+ burgomasters, guilds, aldermen, and all the other lifeless shadows which
+ had been called into existence by Imperial ukaz would instantly have
+ vanished into space. In this fact we have one of the characteristic traits
+ of Russian historical development compared with that of Western Europe. In
+ the West monarchy had to struggle with municipal institutions to prevent
+ them from becoming too powerful; in Russia, it had to struggle with them
+ to prevent them from committing suicide or dying of inanition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to Catherine's legislation, which remained in force until 1870,
+ and still exists in some of its main features, the towns were divided into
+ three categories: (1) Government towns (gubernskiye goroda)&mdash;that is
+ to say, the chief towns of provinces, or governments (gubernii)&mdash;in
+ which are concentrated the various organs of provincial administration;
+ (2) district towns (uyezdniye goroda), in which resides the administration
+ of the districts (uyezdi) into which the provinces are divided; and (3)
+ supernumerary towns (zashtatniye goroda), which have no particular
+ significance in the territorial administration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all these the municipal organisation is the same. Leaving out of
+ consideration those persons who happen to reside in the towns, but in
+ reality belong to the Noblesse, the clergy, or the lower ranks of
+ officials, we may say that the town population is composed of three
+ groups: the merchants (kuptsi), the burghers in the narrower sense of the
+ term (meshtchanye), and the artisans (tsekhoviye). These categories are
+ not hereditary castes, like the nobles, the clergy, and the peasantry. A
+ noble may become a merchant, or a man may be one year a burgher, the next
+ year an artisan, and the third year a merchant, if he changes his
+ occupation and pays the necessary dues. But the categories form, for the
+ time being, distinct corporations, each possessing a peculiar organisation
+ and peculiar privileges and obligations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of these three groups the first in the scale of dignity is that of the
+ merchants. It is chiefly recruited from the burghers and the peasantry.
+ Any one who wishes to engage in commerce inscribes himself in one of the
+ three guilds, according to the amount of his capital and the nature of the
+ operations in which he wishes to embark, and as soon as he has paid the
+ required dues he becomes officially a merchant. As soon as he ceases to
+ pay these dues he ceases to be a merchant in the legal sense of the term,
+ and returns to the class to which he formerly belonged. There are some
+ families whose members have belonged to the merchant class for several
+ generations, and the law speaks about a certain "velvet-book" (barkhatnaya
+ kniga) in which their names should be inscribed, but in reality they do
+ not form a distinct category, and they descend at once from their
+ privileged position as soon as they cease to pay the annual guild dues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The artisans form the connecting link between the town population and the
+ peasantry, for peasants often enrol themselves in the trades-corporations,
+ or tsekhi, without severing their connection with the rural Communes to
+ which they belong. Each trade or handicraft constitutes a tsekh, at the
+ head of which stands an elder and two assistants, elected by the members;
+ and all the tsekhi together form a corporation under an elected head
+ (remeslenny golova) assisted by a council composed of the elders of the
+ various tsekhi. It is the duty of this council and its president to
+ regulate all matters connected with the tsekhi, and to see that the
+ multifarious regulations regarding masters, journeymen, and apprentices
+ are duly observed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nondescript class, composed of those who are inscribed as permanent
+ inhabitants of the towns, but who do not belong to any guild or tsekh,
+ constitutes what is called the burghers in the narrower sense of the term.
+ Like the other two categories, they form a separate corporation, with an
+ elder and an administrative bureau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some idea of the relative numerical strength of these three categories may
+ be obtained from the following figures. Thirty years ago in European
+ Russia the merchant class (including wives and children) numbered about
+ 466,000, the burghers about 4,033,000, and the artisans about 260,000. The
+ numbers according to the last census are not yet available.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1870 the entire municipal administration was reorganised on modern
+ West-European principles, and the Town Council (gorodskaya duma), which
+ formed under the previous system the connecting link between the
+ old-fashioned corporations, and was composed exclusively of members of
+ these bodies, became a genuine representative body composed of
+ householders, irrespective of the social class to which they might belong.
+ A noble, provided he was a house-proprietor, could become Town Councillor
+ or Mayor, and in this way a certain amount of vitality and a progressive
+ spirit were infused into the municipal administration. As a consequence of
+ this change the schools, hospitals, and other benevolent institutions were
+ much improved, the streets were kept cleaner and somewhat better paved,
+ and for a time it seemed as if the towns in Russia might gradually rise to
+ the level of those of Western Europe. But the charm of novelty, which so
+ often works wonders in Russia, soon wore off. After a few years of
+ strenuous effort the best citizens no longer came forward as candidates,
+ and the office-bearers selected no longer displayed zeal and intelligence
+ in the discharge of their duties. In these circumstances the Government
+ felt called upon again to intervene. By a decree dated June 11, 1892, it
+ introduced a new series of reforms, by which the municipal self-government
+ was placed more under the direction and control of the centralised
+ bureaucracy, and the attendance of the Town Councillors at the periodical
+ meetings was declared to be obligatory, recalcitrant members being
+ threatened with reprimands and fines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This last fact speaks volumes for the low vitality of the institutions and
+ the prevalent popular apathy with regard to municipal affairs. Nor was the
+ unsatisfactory state of things much improved by the new reforms; on the
+ contrary, the increased interference of the regular officials tended
+ rather to weaken the vitality of the urban self government, and the
+ so-called reform was pretty generally condemned as a needlessly
+ reactionary measure. We have here, in fact, a case of what has often
+ occurred in the administrative history of the Russian Empire since the
+ time of Peter the Great, and to which I shall again have occasion to
+ refer. The central authority, finding itself incompetent to do all that is
+ required of it, and wishing to make a display of liberalism, accords large
+ concessions in the direction of local autonomy; and when it discovers that
+ the new institutions do not accomplish all that was expected of them, and
+ are not quite so subservient and obsequious as is considered desirable, it
+ returns in a certain measure to the old principles of centralised
+ bureaucracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great development of trade and industry in recent years has of course
+ enriched the mercantile classes, and has introduced into them a more
+ highly educated element, drawn chiefly from the Noblesse, which formerly
+ eschewed such occupations; but it has not yet affected very deeply the
+ mode of life of those who have sprung from the old merchant families and
+ the peasantry. When a merchant, contractor, or manufacturer of the old
+ type becomes wealthy, he builds for himself a fine house, or buys and
+ thoroughly repairs the house of some ruined noble, and spends money freely
+ on parquetry floors, large mirrors, malachite tables, grand pianos by the
+ best makers, and other articles of furniture made of the most costly
+ materials. Occasionally&mdash;especially on the occasion of a marriage or
+ a death in the family&mdash;he will give magnificent banquets, and expend
+ enormous sums on gigantic sterlets, choice sturgeons, foreign fruits,
+ champagne, and all manner of costly delicacies. But this lavish,
+ ostentatious expenditure does not affect the ordinary current of his daily
+ life. As you enter those gaudily furnished rooms you can perceive at a
+ glance that they are not for ordinary use. You notice a rigid symmetry and
+ an indescribable bareness which inevitably suggest that the original
+ arrangements of the upholsterer have never been modified or supplemented.
+ The truth is that by far the greater part of the house is used only on
+ state occasions. The host and his family live down-stairs in small, dirty
+ rooms, furnished in a very different, and for them more comfortable,
+ style. At ordinary times the fine rooms are closed, and the fine furniture
+ carefully covered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you make a visite de politesse after an entertainment, you will
+ probably have some difficulty in gaining admission by the front door. When
+ you have knocked or rung several times, some one will come round from the
+ back regions and ask you what you want. Then follows another long pause,
+ and at last footsteps are heard approaching from within. The bolts are
+ drawn, the door is opened, and you are led up to a spacious drawing-room.
+ At the wall opposite the windows there is sure to be a sofa, and before it
+ an oval table. At each end of the table, and at right angles to the sofa,
+ there will be a row of three arm-chairs. The other chairs will be
+ symmetrically arranged round the room. In a few minutes the host will
+ appear, in his long double-breasted black coat and well-polished long
+ boots. His hair is parted in the middle, and his beard shows no trace of
+ scissors or razor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the customary greetings have been exchanged, glasses of tea, with
+ slices of lemon and preserves, or perhaps a bottle of champagne, are
+ brought in by way of refreshments. The female members of the family you
+ must not expect to see, unless you are an intimate friend; for the
+ merchants still retain something of that female seclusion which was in
+ vogue among the upper classes before the time of Peter the Great. The host
+ himself will probably be an intelligent, but totally uneducated and
+ decidedly taciturn, man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the weather and the crops he may talk fluently enough, but he will
+ not show much inclination to go beyond these topics. You may, perhaps,
+ desire to converse with him on the subject with which he is best
+ acquainted&mdash;the trade in which he is himself engaged; but if you make
+ the attempt, you will certainly not gain much information, and you may
+ possibly meet with such an incident as once happened to my travelling
+ companion, a Russian gentleman who had been commissioned by two learned
+ societies to collect information regarding the grain trade. When he called
+ on a merchant who had promised to assist him in his investigation, he was
+ hospitably received; but when he began to speak about the grain trade of
+ the district the merchant suddenly interrupted him, and proposed to tell
+ him a story. The story was as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once on a time a rich landed proprietor had a son, who was a thoroughly
+ spoilt child; and one day the boy said to his father that he wished all
+ the young serfs to come and sing before the door of the house. After some
+ attempts at dissuasion the request was granted, and the young people
+ assembled; but as soon as they began to sing, the boy rushed out and drove
+ them away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the merchant had told this apparently pointless story at great
+ length, and with much circumstantial detail, he paused a little, poured
+ some tea into his saucer, drank it off, and then inquired, "Now what do
+ you think was the reason of this strange conduct?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My friend replied that the riddle surpassed his powers of divination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," said the merchant, looking hard at him, with a knowing grin,
+ "there was no reason; and all the boy could say was, 'Go away, go away!
+ I've changed my mind; I've changed my mind'" (poshli von; otkhotyel).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no possibility of mistaking the point of the story. My friend
+ took the hint and departed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russian merchant's love of ostentation is of a peculiar kind&mdash;something
+ entirely different from English snobbery. He may delight in gaudy
+ reception-rooms, magnificent dinners, fast trotters, costly furs; or he
+ may display his riches by princely donations to churches, monasteries, or
+ benevolent institutions: but in all this he never affects to be other than
+ he really is. He habitually wears a costume which designates plainly his
+ social position; he makes no attempt to adopt fine manners or elegant
+ tastes; and he never seeks to gain admission to what is called in Russia
+ la societe. Having no desire to seem what he is not, he has a plain,
+ unaffected manner, and sometimes a quiet dignity which contrasts
+ favourably with the affected manner of those nobles of the lower ranks who
+ make pretensions to being highly educated and strive to adopt the outward
+ forms of French culture. At his great dinners, it is true, the merchant
+ likes to see among his guests as many "generals"&mdash;that is to say,
+ official personages&mdash;as possible, and especially those who happen to
+ have a grand cordon; but he never dreams of thereby establishing an
+ intimacy with these personages, or of being invited by them in return. It
+ is perfectly understood by both parties that nothing of the kind is meant.
+ The invitation is given and accepted from quite different motives. The
+ merchant has the satisfaction of seeing at his table men of high official
+ rank, and feels that the consideration which he enjoys among people of his
+ own class is thereby augmented. If he succeeds in obtaining the presence
+ of three generals, he obtains a victory over a rival who cannot obtain
+ more than two. The general, on his side, gets a first-rate dinner, a la
+ russe, and acquires an undefined right to request subscriptions for public
+ objects or benevolent institutions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course this undefined right is commonly nothing more than a mere tacit
+ understanding, but in certain cases the subject is expressly mentioned. I
+ know of one case in which a regular bargain was made. A Moscow magnate was
+ invited by a merchant to a dinner, and consented to go in full uniform,
+ with all his decorations, on condition that the merchant should subscribe
+ a certain sum to a benevolent institution in which he was particularly
+ interested. It is whispered that such bargains are sometimes made, not on
+ behalf of benevolent institutions, but simply in the interest of the
+ gentleman who accepts the invitation. I cannot believe that there are many
+ official personages who would consent to let themselves out as table
+ decorations, but that it may happen is proved by the following incident,
+ which accidentally came to my knowledge. A rich merchant of the town of T&mdash;&mdash;
+ once requested the Governor of the Province to honour a family festivity
+ with his presence, and added that he would consider it a special favour if
+ the "Governoress" would enter an appearance. To this latter request his
+ Excellency made many objections, and at last let the petitioner understand
+ that her Excellency could not possibly be present, because she had no
+ velvet dress that could bear comparison with those of several merchants'
+ wives in the town. Two days after the interview a piece of the finest
+ velvet that could be procured in Moscow was received by the Governor from
+ an unknown donor, and his wife was thus enabled to be present at the
+ festivity, to the complete satisfaction of all parties concerned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is worthy of remark that the merchants recognise no aristocracy but
+ that of official rank. Many merchants would willingly give twenty pounds
+ for the presence of an "actual State Councillor" who perhaps never heard
+ of his grandfather, but who can show a grand cordon; whilst they would not
+ give twenty pence for the presence of an undecorated Prince without
+ official rank, though he might be able to trace his pedigree up to the
+ half-mythical Rurik. Of the latter they would probably say, "Kto ikh
+ znact?" (Who knows what sort of a fellow he is?) The former, on the
+ contrary, whoever his father and grandfather may have been, possesses
+ unmistakable marks of the Tsar's favour, which, in the merchant's opinion,
+ is infinitely more important than any rights or pretensions founded on
+ hereditary titles or long pedigrees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some marks of Imperial favour the old-fashioned merchants strive to obtain
+ for themselves. They do not dream of grand cordons&mdash;that is far
+ beyond their most sanguine expectations&mdash;but they do all in their
+ power to obtain those lesser decorations which are granted to the
+ mercantile class. For this purpose the most common expedient is a liberal
+ subscription to some benevolent institution, and occasionally a regular
+ bargain is made. I know of at least one instance where the kind of
+ decoration was expressly stipulated. The affair illustrates so well the
+ commercial character of these transactions that I venture to state the
+ facts as related to me by the official chiefly concerned. A merchant
+ subscribed to a society which enjoyed the patronage of a Grand Duchess a
+ considerable sum of money, under the express condition that he should
+ receive in return a St. Vladimir Cross. Instead of the desired decoration,
+ which was considered too much for the sum subscribed, a cross of St.
+ Stanislas was granted; but the donor was dissatisfied with the latter and
+ demanded that his money should be returned to him. The demand had to be
+ complied with, and, as an Imperial gift cannot be retracted, the merchant
+ had his Stanislas Cross for nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This traffic in decorations has had its natural result. Like paper money
+ issued in too large quantities, the decorations have fallen in value. The
+ gold medals which were formerly much coveted and worn with pride by the
+ rich merchants&mdash;suspended by a ribbon round the neck&mdash;are now
+ little sought after. In like manner the inordinate respect for official
+ personages has considerably diminished. Fifty years ago the provincial
+ merchants vied with each other in their desire to entertain any great
+ dignitary who honoured their town with a visit, but now they seek rather
+ to avoid this expensive and barren honour. When they do accept the honour,
+ they fulfil the duties of hospitality in a most liberal spirit. I have
+ sometimes, when living as an honoured guest in a rich merchant's house,
+ found it difficult to obtain anything simpler than sterlet, sturgeon, and
+ champagne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two great blemishes on the character of the Russian merchants as a
+ class are, according to general opinion, their ignorance and their
+ dishonesty. As to the former of these there cannot possibly be any
+ difference of opinion. Many of them can neither read nor write, and are
+ forced to keep their accounts in their memory, or by means of ingenious
+ hieroglyphics, intelligible only to the inventor. Others can decipher the
+ calendar and the lives of the saints, can sign their names with tolerable
+ facility, and can make the simpler arithmetical calculations with the help
+ of the stchety, a little calculating instrument, composed of wooden balls
+ strung on brass wires, which resembles the "abaca" of the old Romans, and
+ is universally used in Russia. It is only the minority who understand the
+ mysteries of regular book-keeping, and of these very few can make any
+ pretensions to being educated men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this, however, is rapidly undergoing a radical change. Children are
+ now much better educated than their parents, and the next generation will
+ doubtless make further progress, so that the old-fashioned type above
+ described is destined to disappear. Already there are not a few of the
+ younger generation&mdash;especially among the wealthy manufacturers of
+ Moscow&mdash;who have been educated abroad, who may be described as tout a
+ fait civilises, and whose mode of life differs little from that of the
+ richer nobles; but they remain outside fashionable society, and constitute
+ a "set" of their own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the dishonesty which is said to be so common among the Russian
+ commercial classes, it is difficult to form an accurate judgment. That an
+ enormous amount of unfair dealing does exist there can be no possible
+ doubt, but in this matter a foreigner is likely to be unduly severe. We
+ are apt to apply unflinchingly our own standard of commercial morality,
+ and to forget that trade in Russia is only emerging from that primitive
+ condition in which fixed prices and moderate profits are entirely unknown.
+ And when we happen to detect positive dishonesty, it seems to us
+ especially heinous, because the trickery employed is more primitive and
+ awkward than that to which we are accustomed. Trickery in weighing and
+ measuring, for instance, which is by no means uncommon in Russia, is
+ likely to make us more indignant than those ingenious methods of
+ adulteration which are practised nearer home, and are regarded by many as
+ almost legitimate. Besides this, foreigners who go to Russia and embark in
+ speculations without possessing any adequate knowledge of the character,
+ customs, and language of the people positively invite spoliation, and
+ ought to blame themselves rather than the people who profit by their
+ ignorance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this, and much more of the same kind, may be fairly urged in
+ mitigation of the severe judgments which foreign merchants commonly pass
+ on Russian commercial morality, but these judgments cannot be reversed by
+ such argumentation. The dishonesty and rascality which exist among the
+ merchants are fully recognised by the Russians themselves. In all moral
+ affairs the lower classes in Russia are very lenient in their judgments,
+ and are strongly disposed, like the Americans, to admire what is called in
+ Transatlantic phraseology "a smart man," though the smartness is known to
+ contain a large admixture of dishonesty; and yet the vox populi in Russia
+ emphatically declares that the merchants as a class are unscrupulous and
+ dishonest. There is a rude popular play in which the Devil, as principal
+ dramatis persona, succeeds in cheating all manner and conditions of men,
+ but is finally overreached by a genuine Russian merchant. When this play
+ is acted in the Carnival Theatre in St. Petersburg the audience invariably
+ agrees with the moral of the plot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If this play were acted in the southern towns near the coast of the Black
+ Sea it would be necessary to modify it considerably, for here, in company
+ with Jews, Greeks, and Armenians, the Russian merchants seem honest by
+ comparison. As to Greeks and Armenians, I know not which of the two
+ nationalities deserves the palm, but it seems that both are surpassed by
+ the Children of Israel. "How these Jews do business," I have heard a
+ Russian merchant of this region exclaim, "I cannot understand. They buy up
+ wheat in the villages at eleven roubles per tchetvert, transport it to the
+ coast at their own expense, and sell it to the exporters at ten roubles!
+ And yet they contrive to make a profit! It is said that the Russian trader
+ is cunning, but here 'our brother' [i.e., the Russian] can do nothing."
+ The truth of this statement I have had abundant opportunities of
+ confirming by personal investigations on the spot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If I might express a general opinion regarding Russian commercial
+ morality, I should say that trade in Russia is carried on very much on the
+ same principle as horse-dealing in England. A man who wishes to buy or
+ sell must trust to his own knowledge and acuteness, and if he gets the
+ worst of a bargain or lets himself be deceived, he has himself to blame.
+ Commercial Englishmen on arriving in Russia rarely understand this, and
+ when they know it theoretically they are too often unable, from their
+ ignorance of the language, the laws, and the customs of the people, to
+ turn their theoretical knowledge to account. They indulge, therefore, at
+ first in endless invectives against the prevailing dishonesty; but
+ gradually, when they have paid what Germans call Lehrgeld, they
+ accommodate themselves to circumstances, take large profits to
+ counterbalance bad debts, and generally succeed&mdash;if they have
+ sufficient energy, mother-wit, and capital&mdash;in making a very handsome
+ income.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old race of British merchants, however, is rapidly dying out, and I
+ greatly fear that the rising generation will not be equally successful.
+ Times have changed. It is no longer possible to amass large fortunes in
+ the old easy-going fashion. Every year the conditions alter, and the
+ competition increases. In order to foresee, understand, and take advantage
+ of the changes, one must have far more knowledge of the country than the
+ men of the old school possessed, and it seems to me that the young
+ generation have still less of that knowledge than their predecessors.
+ Unless some change takes place in this respect, the German merchants, who
+ have generally a much better commercial education and are much better
+ acquainted with their adopted country, will ultimately, I believe, expel
+ their British rivals. Already many branches of commerce formerly carried
+ on by Englishmen have passed into their hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must not be supposed that the unsatisfactory organisation of the
+ Russian commercial world is the result of any radical peculiarity of the
+ Russian character. All new countries have to pass through a similar state
+ of things, and in Russia there are already premonitory symptoms of a
+ change for the better. For the present, it is true, the extensive
+ construction of railways and the rapid development of banks and limited
+ liability companies have opened up a new and wide field for all kinds of
+ commercial swindling; but, on the other hand, there are now in every large
+ town a certain number of merchants who carry on business in the
+ West-European manner, and have learnt by experience that honesty is the
+ best policy. The success which many of these have obtained will doubtless
+ cause their example to be followed. The old spirit of caste and routine
+ which has long animated the merchant class is rapidly disappearing, and
+ not a few nobles are now exchanging country life and the service of the
+ State for industrial and commercial enterprises. In this way is being
+ formed the nucleus of that wealthy, enlightened bourgeoisie which
+ Catherine endeavoured to create by legislation; but many years must elapse
+ before this class acquires sufficient social and political significance to
+ deserve the title of a tiers-etat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE PASTORAL TRIBES OF THE STEPPE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ A Journey to the Steppe Region of the Southeast&mdash;The Volga&mdash;Town
+ and Province of Samara&mdash;Farther Eastward&mdash;Appearance of the
+ Villages&mdash;Characteristic Incident&mdash;Peasant Mendacity&mdash;Explanation
+ of the Phenomenon&mdash;I Awake in Asia&mdash;A Bashkir Aoul&mdash;Diner
+ la Tartare&mdash;Kumyss&mdash;A Bashkir Troubadour&mdash;Honest Mehemet
+ Zian&mdash;Actual Economic Condition of the Bashkirs Throws Light on a
+ Well-known Philosophical Theory&mdash;Why a Pastoral Race Adopts
+ Agriculture&mdash;The Genuine Steppe&mdash;The Kirghiz&mdash;Letter from
+ Genghis Khan&mdash;The Kalmyks&mdash;Nogai Tartars&mdash;Struggle between
+ Nomadic Hordes and Agricultural Colonists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I had spent a couple of years or more in the Northern and
+ North-Central provinces&mdash;the land of forests and of agriculture
+ conducted on the three-field system, with here and there a town of
+ respectable antiquity&mdash;I determined to visit for purposes of
+ comparison and contrast the Southeastern region, which possesses no
+ forests nor ancient towns, and corresponds to the Far West of the United
+ States of America. My point of departure was Yaroslavl, a town on the
+ right bank of the Volga to the northeast of Moscow&mdash;and thence I
+ sailed down the river during three days on a large comfortable steamer to
+ Samara, the chief town of the province or "government" of the name. Here I
+ left the steamer and prepared to make a journey into the eastern
+ hinterland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Samara is a new town, a child of the last century. At the time of my first
+ visit, now thirty years ago, it recalled by its unfinished appearance the
+ new towns of America. Many of the houses were of wood. The streets were
+ still in such a primitive condition that after rain they were almost
+ impassable from mud, and in dry, gusty weather they generated thick clouds
+ of blinding, suffocating dust. Before I had been many days in the place I
+ witnessed a dust-hurricane, during which it was impossible at certain
+ moments to see from my window the houses on the other side of the street.
+ Amidst such primitive surroundings the colossal new church seemed a little
+ out of keeping, and it occurred to my practical British mind that some of
+ the money expended on its construction might have been more profitably
+ employed. But the Russians have their own ideas of the fitness of things.
+ Religious after their own fashion, they subscribe money liberally for
+ ecclesiastical purposes&mdash;especially for the building and decoration
+ of their churches. Besides this, the Government considers that every chief
+ town of a province should possess a cathedral.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In its early days Samara was one of the outposts of Russian colonisation,
+ and had often to take precautions against the raids of the nomadic tribes
+ living in the vicinity; but the agricultural frontier has since been
+ pushed far forward to the east and south, and the province was until
+ lately, despite occasional droughts, one of the most productive in the
+ Empire. The town is the chief market of this region, and therein lies its
+ importance. The grain is brought by the peasants from great distances, and
+ stored in large granaries by the merchants, who send it to Moscow or St.
+ Petersburg. In former days this was a very tedious operation. The boats
+ containing the grain were towed by horses or stout peasants up the rivers
+ and through the canals for hundreds of miles. Then came the period of
+ "cabestans"&mdash;unwieldly machines propelled by means of anchors and
+ windlasses. Now these primitive methods of transport have disappeared. The
+ grain is either despatched by rail or put into gigantic barges, which are
+ towed up the river by powerful tug-steamers to some point connected with
+ the great network of railways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the traveller has visited the Cathedral and the granaries he has seen
+ all the lions&mdash;not very formidable lions, truly&mdash;of the place.
+ He may then inspect the kumyss establishments, pleasantly situated near
+ the town. He will find there a considerable number of patients&mdash;mostly
+ consumptive&mdash;who drink enormous quantities of fermented mare's-milk,
+ and who declare that they receive great benefit from this modern
+ health-restorer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What interested me more than the lions of the town or the suburban kumyss
+ establishments were the offices of the local administration, where I found
+ in the archives much statistical and other information of the kind I was
+ in search of, regarding the economic condition of the province generally,
+ and of the emancipated peasantry in particular. Having filled my note-book
+ with material of this sort, I proceeded to verify and complete it by
+ visiting some characteristic villages and questioning the inhabitants. For
+ the student of Russian affairs who wishes to arrive at real, as
+ distinguished from official, truth, this is not an altogether superfluous
+ operation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I had thus made the acquaintance of the sedentary agricultural
+ population in several districts I journeyed eastwards with the intention
+ of visiting the Bashkirs, a Tartar tribe which still preserved&mdash;so at
+ least I was assured&mdash;its old nomadic habits. My reasons for
+ undertaking this journey were twofold. In the first place I was desirous
+ of seeing with my own eyes some remnants of those terrible nomadic tribes
+ which had at one time conquered Russia and long threatened to overrun
+ Europe&mdash;those Tartar hordes which gained, by their irresistible force
+ and relentless cruelty, the reputation of being "the scourge of God."
+ Besides this, I had long wished to study the conditions of pastoral life,
+ and congratulated myself on having found a convenient opportunity of doing
+ so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I proceeded eastwards I noticed a change in the appearance of the
+ villages. The ordinary wooden houses, with their high sloping roofs,
+ gradually gave place to flat-roofed huts, built of a peculiar kind of
+ unburnt bricks, composed of mud and straw. I noticed, too, that the
+ population became less and less dense, and the amount of fallow land
+ proportionately greater. The peasants were evidently richer than those
+ near the Volga, but they complained&mdash;as the Russian peasant always
+ does&mdash;that they had not land enough. In answer to my inquiries why
+ they did not use the thousands of acres that were lying fallow around
+ them, they explained that they had already raised crops on that land for
+ several successive years, and that consequently they must now allow it to
+ "rest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one of the villages through which I passed I met with a very
+ characteristic little incident. The village was called Samovolnaya
+ Ivanofka&mdash;that is to say, "Ivanofka the Self-willed" or "the
+ Non-authorised." Whilst our horses were being changed my travelling
+ companion, in the course of conversation with a group of peasants,
+ inquired about the origin of this extraordinary name, and discovered a
+ curious bit of local history. The founders of the village had settled on
+ the land without the permission of the absentee owner, and obstinately
+ resisted all attempts at eviction. Again and again troops had been sent to
+ drive them away, but as soon as the troops retired these "self-willed"
+ people returned and resumed possession, till at last the proprietor, who
+ lived in St. Petersburg or some other distant place, became weary of the
+ contest and allowed them to remain. The various incidents were related
+ with much circumstantial detail, so that the narration lasted perhaps half
+ an hour. All this time I listened attentively, and when the story was
+ finished I took out my note-book in order to jot down the facts, and asked
+ in what year the affair had happened. No answer was given to my question.
+ The peasants merely looked at each other in a significant way and kept
+ silence. Thinking that my question had not been understood, I asked it a
+ second time, repeating a part of what had been related. To my astonishment
+ and utter discomfiture they all declared that they had never related
+ anything of the sort! In despair I appealed to my friend, and asked him
+ whether my ears had deceived me&mdash;whether I was labouring under some
+ strange hallucination. Without giving me any reply he simply smiled and
+ turned away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we had left the village and were driving along in our tarantass the
+ mystery was satisfactorily cleared up. My friend explained to me that I
+ had not at all misunderstood what had been related, but that my abrupt
+ question and the sight of my note-book had suddenly aroused the peasants'
+ suspicions. "They evidently suspected," he continued, "that you were a
+ tchinovnik, and that you wished to use to their detriment the knowledge
+ you had acquired. They thought it safer, therefore, at once to deny it
+ all. You don't yet understand the Russian muzhik!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this last remark I was obliged to concur, but since that time I have
+ come to know the muzhik better, and an incident of the kind would now no
+ longer surprise me. From a long series of observations I have come to the
+ conclusion that the great majority of the Russian peasants, when dealing
+ with the authorities, consider the most patent and barefaced falsehoods as
+ a fair means of self-defence. Thus, for example, when a muzhik is
+ implicated in a criminal affair, and a preliminary investigation is being
+ made, he probably begins by constructing an elaborate story to explain the
+ facts and exculpate himself. The story may be a tissue of self-evident
+ falsehoods from beginning to end, but he defends it valiantly as long as
+ possible. When he perceives that the position which he has taken up is
+ utterly untenable, he declares openly that all he has said is false, and
+ that he wishes to make a new declaration. This second declaration may have
+ the same fate as the former one, and then he proposes a third. Thus
+ groping his way, he tries various stories till he finds one that seems
+ proof against all objections. In the fact of his thus telling lies there
+ is of course nothing remarkable, for criminals in all parts of the world
+ have a tendency to deviate from the truth when they fall into the hands of
+ justice. The peculiarity is that he retracts his statements with the
+ composed air of a chess-player who requests his opponent to let him take
+ back an inadvertent move. Under the old system of procedure, which was
+ abolished in the sixties, clever criminals often contrived by means of
+ this simple device to have their trial postponed for many years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such incidents naturally astonish a foreigner, and he is apt, in
+ consequence, to pass a very severe judgment on the Russian peasantry in
+ general. The reader may remember Karl Karl'itch's remarks on the subject.
+ These remarks I have heard repeated in various forms by Germans in all
+ parts of the country, and there must be a certain amount of truth in them,
+ for even an eminent Slavophil once publicly admitted that the peasant is
+ prone to perjury.* It is necessary, however, as it seems to me, to draw a
+ distinction. In the ordinary intercourse of peasants among themselves, or
+ with people in whom they have confidence, I do not believe that the habit
+ of lying is abnormally developed. It is only when the muzhik comes in
+ contact with authorities that he shows himself an expert fabricator of
+ falsehoods. In this there is nothing that need surprise us. For ages the
+ peasantry were exposed to the arbitrary power and ruthless exactions of
+ those who were placed over them; and as the law gave them no means of
+ legally protecting themselves, their only means of self-defence lay in
+ cunning and deceit.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Kireyefski, in the Russakaya Beseda.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We have here, I believe, the true explanation of that "Oriental mendacity"
+ about which Eastern travellers have written so much. It is simply the
+ result of a lawless state of society. Suppose a truth-loving Englishman
+ falls into the hands of brigands or savages. Will he not, if he have
+ merely an ordinary moral character, consider himself justified in
+ inventing a few falsehoods in order to effect his escape? If so, we have
+ no right to condemn very severely the hereditary mendacity of those races
+ which have lived for many generations in a position analogous to that of
+ the supposed Englishman among brigands. When legitimate interests cannot
+ be protected by truthfulness and honesty, prudent people always learn to
+ employ means which experience has proved to be more effectual. In a
+ country where the law does not afford protection, the strong man defends
+ himself by his strength, the weak by cunning and duplicity. This fully
+ explains the fact that in Turkey the Christians are less truthful than the
+ Mahometans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we have wandered a long way from the road to Bashkiria. Let us
+ therefore return at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the journeys which I made in Russia this was one of the most
+ agreeable. The weather was bright and warm, without being unpleasantly
+ hot; the roads were tolerably smooth; the tarantass, which had been hired
+ for the whole journey, was nearly as comfortable as a tarantass can be;
+ good milk, eggs, and white bread could be obtained in abundance; there was
+ not much difficulty in procuring horses in the villages through which we
+ passed, and the owners of them were not very extortionate in their
+ demands. But what most contributed to my comfort was that I was
+ accompanied by an agreeable, intelligent young Russian, who kindly
+ undertook to make all the necessary arrangements, and I was thereby freed
+ from those annoyances and worries which are always encountered in
+ primitive countries where travelling is not yet a recognised institution.
+ To him I left the entire control of our movements, passively acquiescing
+ in everything, and asking no questions as to what was coming. Taking
+ advantage of my passivity, he prepared for me one evening a pleasant
+ little surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About sunset we had left a village called Morsha, and shortly afterwards,
+ feeling drowsy, and being warned by my companion that we should have a
+ long, uninteresting drive, I had lain down in the tarantass and gone to
+ sleep. On awaking I found that the tarantass had stopped, and that the
+ stars were shining brightly overhead. A big dog was barking furiously
+ close at hand, and I heard the voice of the yamstchik informing us that we
+ had arrived. I at once sat up and looked about me, expecting to see a
+ village of some kind, but instead of that I perceived a wide open space,
+ and at a short distance a group of haystacks. Close to the tarantass stood
+ two figures in long cloaks, armed with big sticks, and speaking to each
+ other in an unknown tongue. My first idea was that we had been somehow led
+ into a trap, so I drew my revolver in order to be ready for all
+ emergencies. My companion was still snoring loudly by my side, and stoutly
+ resisted all my efforts to awaken him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What's this?" I said, in a gruff, angry voice, to the yamstchik. "Where
+ have you taken us to?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To where I was ordered, master!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the purpose of getting a more satisfactory explanation I took to
+ shaking my sleepy companion, but before he had returned to consciousness
+ the moon shone out brightly from behind a thick bank of clouds, and
+ cleared up the mystery. The supposed haystacks turned out to be tents. The
+ two figures with long sticks, whom I had suspected of being brigands, were
+ peaceable shepherds, dressed in the ordinary Oriental khalát, and tending
+ their sheep, which were grazing close by. Instead of being in an empty
+ hay-field, as I had imagined, we had before us a regular Tartar aoul, such
+ as I had often read about. For a moment I felt astonished and bewildered.
+ It seemed to me that I had fallen asleep in Europe and woke up in Asia!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few minutes we were comfortably installed in one of the tents, a
+ circular, cupola-shaped erection, of about twelve feet in diameter,
+ composed of a frame-work of light wooden rods covered with thick felt. It
+ contained no furniture, except a goodly quantity of carpets and pillows,
+ which had been formed into a bed for our accommodation. Our amiable host,
+ who was evidently somewhat astonished at our unexpected visit, but
+ refrained from asking questions, soon bade us good-night and retired. We
+ were not, however, left alone. A large number of black beetles remained
+ and gave us a welcome in their own peculiar fashion. Whether they were
+ provided with wings, or made up for the want of flying appliances by
+ crawling up the sides of the tent and dropping down on any object they
+ wished to reach, I did not discover, but certain it is that they somehow
+ reached our heads&mdash;even when we were standing upright&mdash;and clung
+ to our hair with wonderful tenacity. Why they should show such a marked
+ preference for human hair we could not conjecture, till it occurred to us
+ that the natives habitually shaved their heads, and that these beetles
+ must naturally consider a hair-covered cranium a curious novelty deserving
+ of careful examination. Like all children of nature they were decidedly
+ indiscreet and troublesome in their curiosity, but when the light was
+ extinguished they took the hint and departed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we awoke next morning it was broad daylight, and we found a crowd of
+ natives in front of the tent. Our arrival was evidently regarded as an
+ important event, and all the inhabitants of the aoul were anxious to make
+ our acquaintance. First our host came forward. He was a short,
+ slimly-built man, of middle age, with a grave, severe expression,
+ indicating an unsociable disposition. We afterwards learned that he was an
+ akhun*&mdash;that is to say, a minor officer of the Mahometan
+ ecclesiastical administration, and at the same time a small trader in
+ silken and woollen stuffs. With him came the mullah, or priest, a portly
+ old gentleman with an open, honest face of the European type, and a fine
+ grey beard. The other important members of the little community followed.
+ They were all swarthy in colour, and had the small eyes and prominent
+ cheek-bones which are characteristic of the Tartar races, but they had
+ little of that flatness of countenance and peculiar ugliness which
+ distinguish the pure Mongol. All of them, with the exception of the
+ mullah, spoke a little Russian, and used it to assure us that we were
+ welcome. The children remained respectfully in the background, and the
+ women, with faces veiled, eyed us furtively from the doors of the tents.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * I presume this is the same word as akhund, well known on
+ the Northwest frontier of India, where it was applied
+ specially to the late ruler of Svat.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The aoul consisted of about twenty tents, all constructed on the same
+ model, and scattered about in sporadic fashion, without the least regard
+ to symmetry. Close by was a watercourse, which appears on some maps as a
+ river, under the name of Karalyk, but which was at that time merely a
+ succession of pools containing a dark-coloured liquid. As we more than
+ suspected that these pools supplied the inhabitants with water for
+ culinary purposes, the sight was not calculated to whet our appetites. We
+ turned away therefore hurriedly, and for want of something better to do we
+ watched the preparations for dinner. These were decidedly primitive. A
+ sheep was brought near the door of our tent, and there killed, skinned,
+ cut up into pieces, and put into an immense pot, under which a fire had
+ been kindled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dinner itself was not less primitive than the manner of preparing it.
+ The table consisted of a large napkin spread in the middle of the tent,
+ and the chairs were represented by cushions, on which we sat cross-legged.
+ There were no plates, knives, forks, spoons, or chopsticks. Guests were
+ expected all to eat out of a common wooden bowl, and to use the
+ instruments with which Nature had provided them. The service was performed
+ by the host and his son. The fare was copious, but not varied&mdash;consisting
+ entirely of boiled mutton, without bread or other substitute, and a little
+ salted horse-flesh thrown in as an entree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To eat out of the same dish with half-a-dozen Mahometans who accept their
+ Prophet's injunction about ablutions in a highly figurative sense, and who
+ are totally unacquainted with the use of forks and spoons, is not an
+ agreeable operation, even if one is not much troubled with religious
+ prejudices; but with these Bashkirs something worse than this has to be
+ encountered, for their favourite method of expressing their esteem and
+ affection for one with whom they are eating consists in putting bits of
+ mutton, and sometimes even handfuls of hashed meat, into his month! When I
+ discovered this unexpected peculiarity in Bashkir manners and customs, I
+ almost regretted that I had made a favourable impression upon my new
+ acquaintances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the sheep had been devoured, partly by the company in the tent and
+ partly by a nondescript company outside&mdash;for the whole aoul took part
+ in the festivities&mdash;kumyss was served in unlimited quantities. This
+ beverage, as I have already explained, is mare's milk fermented; but what
+ here passed under the name was very different from the kumyss I had tasted
+ in the establissements of Samara. There it was a pleasant effervescing
+ drink, with only the slightest tinge of acidity; here it was a "still"
+ liquid, strongly resembling very thin and very sour butter-milk. My
+ Russian friend made a wry face on first tasting it, and I felt inclined at
+ first to do likewise, but noticing that his grimaces made an unfavourable
+ impression on the audience, I restrained my facial muscles, and looked as
+ if I liked it. Very soon I really came to like it, and learned to "drink
+ fair" with those who had been accustomed to it from their childhood. By
+ this feat I rose considerably in the estimation of the natives; for if one
+ does not drink kumyss one cannot be sociable in the Bashkir sense of the
+ term, and by acquiring the habit one adopts an essential principle of
+ Bashkir nationality. I should certainly have preferred having a cup of it
+ to myself, but I thought it well to conform to the habits of the country,
+ and to accept the big wooden bowl when it was passed round. In return my
+ friends made an important concession in my favour: they allowed me to
+ smoke as I pleased, though they considered that, as the Prophet had
+ refrained from tobacco, ordinary mortals should do the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst the "loving-cup" was going round I distributed some small presents
+ which I had brought for the purpose, and then proceeded to explain the
+ object of my visit. In the distant country from which I came&mdash;far
+ away to the westward&mdash;I had heard of the Bashkirs as a people
+ possessing many strange customs, but very kind and hospitable to
+ strangers. Of their kindness and hospitality I had already learned
+ something by experience, and I hoped they would allow me to learn
+ something of their mode of life, their customs, their songs, their
+ history, and their religion, in all of which I assured them my distant
+ countrymen took a lively interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This little after-dinner speech was perhaps not quite in accordance with
+ Bashkir etiquette, but it made a favourable impression. There was a
+ decided murmur of approbation, and those who understood Russian translated
+ my words to their less accomplished brethren. A short consultation ensued,
+ and then there was a general shout of "Abdullah! Abdullah!" which was
+ taken up and repeated by those standing outside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few minutes Abdullah appeared, with a big, half-picked bone in his
+ hand, and the lower part of his face besmeared with grease. He was a
+ short, thin man, with a dark, sallow complexion, and a look of premature
+ old age; but the suppressed smile that played about his mouth and a
+ tremulous movement of his right eye-lid showed plainly that he had not yet
+ forgotten the fun and frolic of youth. His dress was of richer and more
+ gaudy material, but at the same time more tawdry and tattered, than that
+ of the others. Altogether he looked like an artiste in distressed
+ circumstances, and such he really was. At a word and a sign from the host
+ he laid aside his bone and drew from under his green silk khalát a small
+ wind-instrument resembling a flute or flageolet. On this he played a
+ number of native airs. The first melodies which he played reminded me of a
+ Highland pibroch&mdash;at one moment low, solemn, and plaintive, then
+ gradually rising into a soul-stirring, martial strain, and again
+ descending to a plaintive wail. The amount of expression which he put into
+ his simple instrument was truly marvellous. Then, passing suddenly from
+ grave to gay, he played a series of light, merry airs, and some of the
+ younger onlookers got up and performed a dance as boisterous and
+ ungraceful as an Irish jig.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Abdullah turned out to be for me a most valuable acquaintance. He was
+ a kind of Bashkir troubadour, well acquainted not only with the music, but
+ also with the traditions, the history, the superstitions, and the
+ folk-lore of his people. By the akhun and the mullah he was regarded as a
+ frivolous, worthless fellow, who had no regular, respectable means of
+ gaining a livelihood, but among the men of less rigid principles he was a
+ general favourite. As he spoke Russian fluently I could converse with him
+ freely without the aid of an interpreter, and he willingly placed his
+ store of knowledge at my disposal. When in the company of the akhun he was
+ always solemn and taciturn, but as soon as he was relieved of that
+ dignitary's presence he became lively and communicative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another of my new acquaintances was equally useful to me in another way.
+ This was Mehemet Zian, who was not so intelligent as Abdullah, but much
+ more sympathetic. In his open, honest face, and kindly, unaffected manner
+ there was something so irresistibly attractive that before I had known him
+ twenty-four hours a sort of friendship had sprung up between us. He was a
+ tall, muscular, broad-shouldered man, with features that suggested a
+ mixture of European blood. Though already past middle age, he was still
+ wiry and active&mdash;so active that he could, when on horseback, pick a
+ stone off the ground without dismounting. He could, however, no longer
+ perform this feat at full gallop, as he had been wont to do in his youth.
+ His geographical knowledge was extremely limited and inaccurate&mdash;his
+ mind being in this respect like those old Russian maps in which the
+ nations of the earth and a good many peoples who had never more than a
+ mythical existence are jumbled together in hopeless confusion&mdash;but
+ his geographical curiosity was insatiable. My travelling-map&mdash;the
+ first thing of the kind he had ever seen&mdash;interested him deeply. When
+ he found that by simply examining it and glancing at my compass I could
+ tell him the direction and distance of places he knew, his face was like
+ that of a child who sees for the first time a conjuror's performance; and
+ when I explained the trick to him, and taught him to calculate the
+ distance to Bokhara&mdash;the sacred city of the Mussulmans of that region&mdash;his
+ delight was unbounded. Gradually I perceived that to possess such a map
+ had become the great object of his ambition. Unfortunately I could not at
+ once gratify him as I should have wished, because I had a long journey
+ before me and I had no other map of the region, but I promised to find
+ ways and means of sending him one, and I kept my word by means of a native
+ of the Karalyk district whom I discovered in Samara. I did not add a
+ compass because I could not find one in the town, and it would have been
+ of little use to him: like a true child of nature he always knew the
+ cardinal points by the sun or the stars. Some years later I had the
+ satisfaction of learning that the map had reached its destination safely,
+ through no less a personage than Count Tolstoy. One evening at the home of
+ a friend in Moscow I was presented to the great novelist, and as soon as
+ he heard my name he said: "Oh! I know you already, and I know your friend
+ Mehemet Zian. When I passed a night this summer in his aoul he showed me a
+ map with your signature on the margin, and taught me how to calculate the
+ distance to Bokhara!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Mehemet knew little of foreign countries he was thoroughly well
+ acquainted with his own, and repaid me most liberally for my elementary
+ lessons in geography. With him I visited the neighbouring aouls. In all of
+ them he had numerous acquaintances, and everywhere we were received with
+ the greatest hospitality, except on one occasion when we paid a visit of
+ ceremony to a famous robber who was the terror of the whole neighbourhood.
+ Certainly he was one of the most brutalised specimens of humanity I have
+ ever encountered. He made no attempt to be amiable, and I felt inclined to
+ leave his tent at once; but I saw that my friend wanted to conciliate him,
+ so I restrained my feelings and eventually established tolerably good
+ relations with him. As a rule I avoided festivities, partly because I knew
+ that my hosts were mostly poor and would not accept payment for the
+ slaughtered sheep, and partly because I had reason to apprehend that they
+ would express to me their esteem and affection more Bashkirico; but in
+ kumyss-drinking, the ordinary occupation of these people when they have
+ nothing to do, I had to indulge to a most inordinate extent. On these
+ expeditions Abdullah generally accompanied us, and rendered valuable
+ service as interpreter and troubadour. Mehemet could express himself in
+ Russian, but his vocabulary failed him as soon as the conversation ran
+ above very ordinary topics; Abdullah, on the contrary, was a first-rate
+ interpreter, and under the influence of his musical pipe and lively
+ talkativeness new acquaintances became sociable and communicative. Poor
+ Abdullah! He was a kind of universal genius; but his faded, tattered
+ khalát showed only too plainly that in Bashkiria, as in more civilised
+ countries, universal genius and the artistic temperament lead to poverty
+ rather than to wealth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have no intention of troubling the reader with the miscellaneous facts
+ which, with the assistance of these two friends, I succeeded in collecting&mdash;indeed,
+ I could not if I would, for the notes I then made were afterwards lost&mdash;but
+ I wish to say a few words about the actual economic condition of the
+ Bashkirs. They are at present passing from pastoral to agricultural life;
+ and it is not a little interesting to note the causes which induce them to
+ make this change, and the way in which it is made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philosophers have long held a theory of social development according to
+ which men were at first hunters, then shepherds, and lastly
+ agriculturists. How far this theory is in accordance with reality we need
+ not for the present inquire, but we may examine an important part of it
+ and ask ourselves the question, Why did pastoral tribes adopt agriculture?
+ The common explanation is that they changed their mode of life in
+ consequence of some ill-defined, fortuitous circumstances. A great
+ legislator arose amongst them and taught them to till the soil, or they
+ came in contact with an agricultural race and adopted the customs of their
+ neighbours. Such explanations must appear unsatisfactory to any one who
+ has lived with a pastoral people. Pastoral life is so incomparably more
+ agreeable than the hard lot of the agriculturist, and so much more in
+ accordance with the natural indolence of human nature, that no great
+ legislator, though he had the wisdom of a Solon and the eloquence of a
+ Demosthenes, could possibly induce his fellow-countrymen to pass
+ voluntarily from the one to the other. Of all the ordinary means of
+ gaining a livelihood&mdash;with the exception perhaps of mining&mdash;agriculture
+ is the most laborious, and is never voluntarily adopted by men who have
+ not been accustomed to it from their childhood. The life of a pastoral
+ race, on the contrary, is a perennial holiday, and I can imagine nothing
+ except the prospect of starvation which could induce men who live by their
+ flocks and herds to make the transition to agricultural life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prospect of starvation is, in fact, the cause of the transition&mdash;probably
+ in all cases, and certainly in the case of the Bashkirs. So long as they
+ had abundance of pasturage they never thought of tilling the soil. Their
+ flocks and herds supplied them with all that they required, and enabled
+ them to lead a tranquil, indolent existence. No great legislator arose
+ among them to teach them the use of the plough and the sickle, and when
+ they saw the Russian peasants on their borders laboriously ploughing and
+ reaping, they looked on them with compassion, and never thought of
+ following their example. But an impersonal legislator came to them&mdash;a
+ very severe and tyrannical legislator, who would not brook disobedience&mdash;I
+ mean Economic Necessity. By the encroachments of the Ural Cossacks on the
+ east, and by the ever-advancing wave of Russian colonisation from the
+ north and west, their territory had been greatly diminished. With
+ diminution of the pasturage came diminution of the live stock, their sole
+ means of subsistence. In spite of their passively conservative spirit they
+ had to look about for some new means of obtaining food and clothing&mdash;some
+ new mode of life requiring less extensive territorial possessions. It was
+ only then that they began to think of imitating their neighbours. They saw
+ that the neighbouring Russian peasant lived comfortably on thirty or forty
+ acres of land, whilst they possessed a hundred and fifty acres per male,
+ and were in danger of starvation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conclusion to be drawn from this was self-evident&mdash;they ought at
+ once to begin ploughing and sowing. But there was a very serious obstacle
+ to the putting of this principle in practice. Agriculture certainly
+ requires less land than sheep-farming, but it requires very much more
+ labour, and to hard work the Bashkirs were not accustomed. They could bear
+ hardships and fatigues in the shape of long journeys on horseback, but the
+ severe, monotonous labour of the plough and the sickle was not to their
+ taste. At first, therefore, they adopted a compromise. They had a portion
+ of their land tilled by Russian peasants, and ceded to these a part of the
+ produce in return for the labour expended; in other words, they assumed
+ the position of landed proprietors, and farmed part of their land on the
+ metayage system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The process of transition had reached this point in several aouls which I
+ visited. My friend Mehemet Zian showed me at some distance from the tents
+ his plot of arable land, and introduced me to the peasant who tilled it&mdash;a
+ Little-Russian, who assured me that the arrangement satisfied all parties.
+ The process of transition cannot, however, stop here. The compromise is
+ merely a temporary expedient. Virgin soil gives very abundant harvests,
+ sufficient to support both the labourer and the indolent proprietor, but
+ after a few years the soil becomes exhausted and gives only a very
+ moderate revenue. A proprietor, therefore, must sooner or later dispense
+ with the labourers who take half of the produce as their recompense, and
+ must himself put his hand to the plough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus we see the Bashkirs are, properly speaking, no longer a purely
+ pastoral, nomadic people. The discovery of this fact caused me some little
+ disappointment, and in the hope of finding a tribe in a more primitive
+ condition I visited the Kirghiz of the Inner Horde, who occupy the country
+ to the southward, in the direction of the Caspian. Here for the first time
+ I saw the genuine Steppe in the full sense of the term&mdash;a country
+ level as the sea, with not a hillock or even a gentle undulation to break
+ the straight line of the horizon, and not a patch of cultivation, a tree,
+ a bush, or even a stone, to diversify the monotonous expanse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Traversing such a region is, I need scarcely say, very weary work&mdash;all
+ the more as there are no milestones or other landmarks to show the
+ progress you are making. Still, it is not so overwhelmingly wearisome as
+ might be supposed. In the morning you may watch the vast lakes, with their
+ rugged promontories and well-wooded banks, which the mirage creates for
+ your amusement. Then during the course of the day there are always one or
+ two trifling incidents which arouse you for a little from your somnolence.
+ Now you descry a couple of horsemen on the distant horizon, and watch them
+ as they approach; and when they come alongside you may have a talk with
+ them if you know the language or have an interpreter; or you may amuse
+ yourself with a little pantomime, if articulate speech is impossible. Now
+ you encounter a long train of camels marching along with solemn, stately
+ step, and speculate as to the contents of the big packages with which they
+ are laden. Now you encounter the carcass of a horse that has fallen by the
+ wayside, and watch the dogs and the steppe eagles fighting over their
+ prey; and if you are murderously inclined you may take a shot with your
+ revolver at these great birds, for they are ignorantly brave, and will
+ sometimes allow you to approach within twenty or thirty yards. At last you
+ perceive&mdash;most pleasant sight of all&mdash;a group of haystack-shaped
+ tents in the distance; and you hurry on to enjoy the grateful shade, and
+ quench your thirst with "deep, deep draughts" of refreshing kumyss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During my journey through the Kirghiz country I was accompanied by a
+ Russian gentleman, who had provided himself with a circular letter from
+ the hereditary chieftain of the Horde, a personage who rejoiced in the
+ imposing name of Genghis Khan,* and claimed to be a descendant of the
+ great Mongol conqueror. This document assured us a good reception in the
+ aouls through which we passed. Every Kirghis who saw it treated it with
+ profound respect, and professed to put all his goods and chattels at our
+ service. But in spite of this powerful recommendation we met with none of
+ the friendly cordiality and communicativeness which I had found among the
+ Bashkirs. A tent with an unlimited quantity of cushions was always set
+ apart for our accommodation; the sheep were killed and boiled for our
+ dinner, and the pails of kumyss were regularly brought for our
+ refreshment; but all this was evidently done as a matter of duty and not
+ as a spontaneous expression of hospitality. When we determined once or
+ twice to prolong our visit beyond the term originally announced, I could
+ perceive that our host was not at all delighted by the change of our
+ plans. The only consolation we had was that those who entertained us made
+ no scruples about accepting payment for the food and shelter supplied.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * I have adopted the ordinary English spelling of this name.
+ The Kirghiz and the Russians pronounce it "Tchinghiz."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ From all this I have no intention of drawing the conclusion that the
+ Kirghiz are, as a people, inhospitable or unfriendly to strangers. My
+ experience of them is too limited to warrant any such inference. The
+ letter of Genghis Khan insured us all the accommodation we required, but
+ it at the same time gave us a certain official character not at all
+ favourable to the establishment of friendly relations. Those with whom we
+ came in contact regarded us as Russian officials, and suspected us of
+ having some secret designs. As I endeavoured to discover the number of
+ their cattle, and to form an approximate estimate of their annual revenue,
+ they naturally feared&mdash;having no conception of disinterested
+ scientific curiosity&mdash;that these data were being collected for the
+ purpose of increasing the taxes, or with some similar intention of a
+ sinister kind. Very soon I perceived clearly that any information we might
+ here collect regarding the economic conditions of pastoral life would not
+ be of much value, and I postponed my proposed studies to a more convenient
+ season.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Kirghiz are, ethnographically speaking, closely allied to the
+ Bashkirs, but differ from them both in physiognomy and language. Their
+ features approach much nearer the pure Mongol type, and their language is
+ a distinct dialect, which a Bashkir or a Tartar of Kazan has some
+ difficulty in understanding. They are professedly Mahometans, but their
+ Mahometanism is not of a rigid kind, as may be seen by the fact that their
+ women do not veil their faces even in the presence of Ghiaours&mdash;a
+ laxness of which the Ghiaour will certainly not approve if he happen to be
+ sensitive to female beauty and ugliness. Their mode of life differs from
+ that of the Bashkirs, but they have proportionately more land and are
+ consequently still able to lead a purely pastoral life. Near their western
+ frontier, it is true, they annually let patches of land to the Russian
+ peasants for the purpose of raising crops; but these encroachments can
+ never advance very far, for the greater part of their territory is
+ unsuited to agriculture, on account of a large admixture of salt in the
+ soil. This fact will have an important influence on their future. Unlike
+ the Bashkirs, who possess good arable land, and are consequently on the
+ road to become agriculturists, they will in all probability continue to
+ live exclusively by their flocks and herds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the southwest of the Lower Volga, in the flat region lying to the north
+ of the Caucasus, we find another pastoral tribe, the Kalmyks, differing
+ widely from the two former in language, in physiognomy, and in religion.
+ Their language, a dialect of the Mongolian, has no close affinity with any
+ other language in this part of the world. In respect of religion they are
+ likewise isolated, for they are Buddhists, and have consequently no
+ co-religionists nearer than Mongolia or Thibet. But it is their
+ physiognomy that most strikingly distinguishes them from the surrounding
+ peoples, and stamps them as Mongols of the purest water. There is
+ something almost infra-human in their ugliness. They show in an
+ exaggerated degree all those repulsive traits which we see toned down and
+ refined in the face of an average Chinaman; and it is difficult, when we
+ meet them for the first time, to believe that a human soul lurks behind
+ their expressionless, flattened faces and small, dull, obliquely set eyes.
+ If the Tartar and Turkish races are really descended from ancestors of
+ that type, then we must assume that they have received in the course of
+ time a large admixture of Aryan or Semitic blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we must not be too hard on the poor Kalmyks, or judge of their
+ character by their unprepossessing appearance. They are by no means so
+ unhuman as they look. Men who have lived among them have assured me that
+ they are decidedly intelligent, especially in all matters relating to
+ cattle, and that they are&mdash;though somewhat addicted to cattle-lifting
+ and other primitive customs not tolerated in the more advanced stages of
+ civilisation&mdash;by no means wanting in some of the better qualities of
+ human nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Formerly there was a fourth pastoral tribe in this region&mdash;the Nogai
+ Tartars. They occupied the plains to the north of the Sea of Azof, but
+ they are no longer to be found there. Shortly after the Crimean war they
+ emigrated to Turkey, and their lands are now occupied by Russian, German,
+ Bulgarian, and Montenegrin colonists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the pastoral tribes of this region the Kalmyks are recent intruders.
+ They first appeared in the seventeenth century, and were long formidable
+ on account of their great numbers and compact organisation; but in 1771
+ the majority of them suddenly struck their tents and retreated to their
+ old home in the north of the Celestial Empire. Those who remained were
+ easily pacified, and have long since lost, under the influence of unbroken
+ peace and a strong Russian administration, their old warlike spirit. Their
+ latest military exploits were performed during the last years of the
+ Napoleonic wars, and were not of a very serious kind; a troop of them
+ accompanied the Russian army, and astonished Western Europe by their
+ uncouth features, their strange costume, and their primitive
+ accoutrements, among which their curious bows and arrows figured
+ conspicuously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other pastoral tribes which I have mentioned&mdash;Bashkirs, Kirghiz,
+ and Nogai Tartars&mdash;are the last remnants of the famous marauders who
+ from time immemorial down to a comparatively recent period held the vast
+ plains of Southern Russia. The long struggle between them and the
+ agricultural colonists from the northwest, closely resembling the long
+ struggle between the Red-skins and the white settlers on the prairies of
+ North America, forms an important page of Russian history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For centuries the warlike nomads stoutly resisted all encroachments on
+ their pasture-grounds, and considered cattle-lifting, kidnapping, and
+ pillage as a legitimate and honorable occupation. "Their raids," says an
+ old Byzantine writer, "are as flashes of lightning, and their retreat is
+ at once heavy and light&mdash;heavy from booty and light from the
+ swiftness of their movements. For them a peaceful life is a misfortune,
+ and a convenient opportunity for war is the height of felicity. Worst of
+ all, they are more numerous than bees in spring, their numbers are
+ uncountable." "Having no fixed place of abode," says another Byzantine
+ authority, "they seek to conquer all lands and colonise none. They are
+ flying people, and therefore cannot be caught. As they have neither towns
+ nor villages, they must be hunted like wild beasts, and can be fitly
+ compared only to griffins, which beneficent Nature has banished to
+ uninhabited regions." As a Persian distich, quoted by Vambery, has it&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "They came, conquered, burned,
+ pillaged, murdered, and went."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Their raids are thus described by an old Russian chronicler: "They burn
+ the villages, the farmyards, and the churches. The land is turned by them
+ into a desert, and the overgrown fields become the lair of wild beasts.
+ Many people are led away into slavery; others are tortured and killed, or
+ die from hunger and thirst. Sad, weary, stiff from cold, with faces wan
+ from woe, barefoot or naked, and torn by the thistles, the Russian
+ prisoners trudge along through an unknown country, and, weeping, say to
+ one another, 'I am from such a town, and I from such a village.'" And in
+ harmony with the monastic chroniclers we hear the nameless Slavonic Ossian
+ wailing for the fallen sons of Rus: "In the Russian land is rarely heard
+ the voice of the husbandman, but often the cry of the vultures, fighting
+ with each other over the bodies of the slain; and the ravens scream as
+ they fly to the spoil."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of the stubborn resistance of the nomads the wave of colonisation
+ moved steadily onwards until the first years of the thirteenth century,
+ when it was suddenly checked and thrown back. A great Mongolian horde from
+ Eastern Asia, far more numerous and better organized than the local
+ nomadic tribes, overran the whole country, and for more than two centuries
+ Russia was in a certain sense ruled by Mongol Khans. As I wish to speak at
+ some length of this Mongol domination, I shall devote to it a separate
+ chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE MONGOL DOMINATION
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The Conquest&mdash;Genghis Khan and his People&mdash;Creation and Rapid
+ Disintegration of the Mongol Empire&mdash;The Golden Horde&mdash;The Real
+ Character of the Mongol Domination&mdash;Religious Toleration&mdash;Mongol
+ System of Government&mdash;Grand Princes&mdash;The Princes of Moscow&mdash;Influence
+ of the Mongol Domination&mdash;Practical Importance of the Subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Tartar invasion, with its direct and indirect consequences, is a
+ subject which has more than a mere antiquarian interest. To the influence
+ of the Mongols are commonly attributed many peculiarities in the actual
+ condition and national character of the Russians of the present day, and
+ some writers would even have us believe that the men whom we call Russians
+ are simply Tartars half disguised by a thin varnish of European
+ civilisation. It may be well, therefore, to inquire what the Tartar or
+ Mongol domination really was, and how far it affected the historical
+ development and national character of the Russian people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story of the conquest may be briefly told. In 1224 the chieftains of
+ the Poloftsi&mdash;one of those pastoral tribes which roamed on the Steppe
+ and habitually carried on a predatory warfare with the Russians of the
+ south&mdash;sent deputies to Mistislaf the Brave, Prince of Galicia, to
+ inform him that their country had been invaded from the southeast by
+ strong, cruel enemies called Tartars*&mdash;strange-looking men with brown
+ faces, eyes small and wide apart, thick lips, broad shoulders, and black
+ hair. "Today," said the deputies, "they have seized our country, and
+ tomorrow they will seize yours if you do not help us."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The word is properly "Tatar," and the Russians write and
+ pronounce it in this way, but I have preferred to retain the
+ better known form.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Mistislaf had probably no objection to the Poloftsi being annihilated by
+ some tribe stronger and fiercer than themselves, for they gave him a great
+ deal of trouble by their frequent raids; but he perceived the force of the
+ argument about his own turn coming next, and thought it wise to assist his
+ usually hostile neighbours. For the purpose of warding off the danger he
+ called together the neighbouring Princes, and urged them to join him in an
+ expedition against the new enemy. The expedition was undertaken, and ended
+ in disaster. On the Kalka, a small river falling into the Sea of Azof, the
+ Russian host met the invaders, and was completely routed. The country was
+ thereby opened to the victors, but they did not follow up their advantage.
+ After advancing for some distance they suddenly wheeled round and
+ disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus ended unexpectedly the first visit of these unwelcome strangers.
+ Thirteen years afterwards they returned, and were not so easily got rid
+ of. An enormous horde crossed the River Ural and advanced into the heart
+ of the country, pillaging, burning, devastating, and murdering. Nowhere
+ did they meet with serious resistance. The Princes made no attempt to
+ combine against the common enemy. Nearly all the principal towns were laid
+ in ashes, and the inhabitants were killed or carried off as slaves. Having
+ conquered Russia, they advanced westward, and threw all Europe into alarm.
+ The panic reached even England, and interrupted, it is said, for a time
+ the herring fishing on the coast. Western Europe, however, escaped their
+ ravages. After visiting Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria, Servia, and Dalmatia,
+ they retreated to the Lower Volga, and the Russian Princes were summoned
+ thither to do homage to the victorious Khan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first the Russians had only very vague notions as to who this terrible
+ enemy was. The old chronicler remarks briefly: "For our sins unknown
+ peoples have appeared. No one knows who they are or whence they have come,
+ or to what race and faith they belong. They are commonly called Tartars,
+ but some call them Tauermen, and others Petchenegs. Who they really are is
+ known only to God, and perhaps to wise men deeply read in books." Some of
+ these "wise men deeply read in books" supposed them to be the idolatrous
+ Moabites who had in Old Testament times harassed God's chosen people,
+ whilst others thought that they must be the descendants of the men whom
+ Gideon had driven out, of whom a revered saint had prophesied that they
+ would come in the latter days and conquer the whole earth, from the East
+ even unto the Euphrates, and from the Tigris even unto the Black Sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are now happily in a position to dispense with such vague
+ ethnographical speculations. From the accounts of several European
+ travellers who visited Tartary about that time, and from the writings of
+ various Oriental historians, we know a great deal about these barbarians
+ who conquered Russia and frightened the Western nations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vast region lying to the east of Russia, from the basin of the Volga
+ to the shores of the Pacific Ocean, was inhabited then, as it is still, by
+ numerous Tartar and Mongol tribes. These two terms are often regarded as
+ identical and interchangeable, but they ought, I think, to be
+ distinguished. From the ethnographic, the linguistic, and the religious
+ point of view they differ widely from each other. The Kazan Tartars, the
+ Bashkirs, the Kirghiz, in a word, all the tribes in the country stretching
+ latitudinally from the Volga to Kashgar, and longitudinally from the
+ Persian frontier, the Hindu Kush and the Northern Himalaya, to a line
+ drawn east and west through the middle of Siberia, belong to the Tartar
+ group; whereas those further eastward, occupying Mongolia and Manchuria,
+ are Mongol in the stricter sense of the term.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A very little experience enables the traveller to distinguish between the
+ two. Both of them have the well-known characteristics of the Northern
+ Asiatic&mdash;the broad flat face, yellow skin, small, obliquely set eyes,
+ high cheekbones, thin, straggling beard; but these traits are more
+ strongly marked, more exaggerated, if we may use such an expression, in
+ the Mongol than in the Tartar. Thus the Mongol is, according to our
+ conceptions, by far the uglier of the two, and the man of Tartar race,
+ when seen beside him, appears almost European by comparison. The
+ distinction is confirmed by a study of their languages. All the Tartar
+ languages are closely allied, so that a person of average linguistic
+ talent who has mastered one of them, whether it be the rude Turki of
+ Central Asia or the highly polished Turkish of Stambul, can easily acquire
+ any of the others; whereas even an extensive acquaintance with the Tartar
+ dialects will be of no practical use to him in learning a language of the
+ Mongol group. In their religions likewise the two races differ. The
+ Mongols are as a rule Shamanists or Buddhists, while the Tartars are
+ Mahometans. Some of the Mongol invaders, it is true, adopted Mahometanism
+ from the conquered Tartar tribes, and by this change of religion, which
+ led naturally to intermarriage, their descendants became gradually blended
+ with the older population; but the broad line of distinction was not
+ permanently effaced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is often supposed, even by people who profess to be acquainted with
+ Russian history, that Mongols and Tartars alike first came westward to the
+ frontiers of Europe with Genghis Khan. This is true of the Mongols, but so
+ far as the Tartars are concerned it is an entire mistake. From time
+ immemorial the Tartar tribes roamed over these territories. Like the
+ Russians, they were conquered by the Mongol invaders and had long to pay
+ tribute, and when the Mongol empire crumbled to pieces by internal
+ dissensions and finally disappeared before the victorious advance of the
+ Russians, the Tartars reappeared from the confusion without having lost,
+ notwithstanding an intermixture doubtless of Mongol blood, their old
+ racial characteristics, their old dialects, and their old tribal
+ organisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The germ of the vast horde which swept over Asia and advanced into the
+ centre of Europe was a small pastoral tribe of Mongols living in the hilly
+ country to the north of China, near the sources of the Amur. This tribe
+ was neither more warlike nor more formidable than its neighbours till near
+ the close of the twelfth century, when there appeared in it a man who is
+ described as "a mighty hunter before the Lord." Of him and his people we
+ have a brief description by a Chinese author of the time: "A man of
+ gigantic stature, with broad forehead and long beard, and remarkable for
+ his bravery. As to his people, their faces are broad, flat, and
+ four-cornered, with prominent cheek-bones; their eyes have no upper
+ eyelashes; they have very little hair in their beards and moustaches;
+ their exterior is very repulsive." This man of gigantic stature was no
+ other than Genghis Khan. He began by subduing and incorporating into his
+ army the surrounding tribes, conquered with their assistance a great part
+ of Northern China, and then, leaving one of his generals to complete the
+ conquest of the Celestial Empire, he led his army westward with the
+ ambitious design of conquering the whole world. "As there is but one God
+ in heaven," he was wont to say, "so there should be but one ruler on
+ earth"; and this one universal ruler he himself aspired to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A European army necessarily diminishes in force and its existence becomes
+ more and more imperilled as it advances from its base of operations into a
+ foreign and hostile country. Not so a horde like that of Genghis Khan in a
+ country such as that which it had to traverse. It needed no base of
+ operations, for it took with it its flocks, its tents, and all its worldly
+ goods. Properly speaking, it was not an army at all, but rather a people
+ in movement. The grassy Steppes fed the flocks, and the flocks fed the
+ warriors; and with such a simple commissariat system there was no
+ necessity for keeping up communications with the point of departure.
+ Instead of diminishing in numbers, the horde constantly increased as it
+ moved forwards. The nomadic tribes which it encountered on its way,
+ composed of men who found a home wherever they found pasture and
+ drinking-water, required little persuasion to make them join the onward
+ movement. By means of this terrible instrument of conquest Genghis
+ succeeded in creating a colossal Empire, stretching from the Carpathians
+ to the eastern shores of Asia, and from the Arctic Ocean to the Himalayas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Genghis was no mere ruthless destroyer; he was at the same time one of the
+ greatest administrators the world has ever seen. But his administrative
+ genius could not work miracles. His vast Empire, founded on conquest and
+ composed of the most heterogeneous elements, had no principle of organic
+ life in it, and could not possibly be long-lived. It had been created by
+ him, and it perished with him. For some time after his death the dignity
+ of Grand Khan was held by some one of his descendants, and the centralised
+ administration was nominally preserved; but the local rulers rapidly
+ emancipated themselves from the central authority, and within half a
+ century after the death of its founder the great Mongol Empire was little
+ more than "a geographical expression."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the dismemberment of the short-lived Empire the danger for Eastern
+ Europe was by no means at an end. The independent hordes were scarcely
+ less formidable than the Empire itself. A grandson of Genghis formed on
+ the Russian frontier a new State, commonly known as Kiptchak, or the
+ Golden Horde, and built a capital called Serai, on one of the arms of the
+ Lower Volga. This capital, which has since so completely disappeared that
+ there is some doubt as to its site, is described by Ibn Batuta, who
+ visited it in the fifteenth century, as a very great, populous, and
+ beautiful city, possessing many mosques, fine market-places, and broad
+ streets, in which were to be seen merchants from Babylon, Egypt, Syria,
+ and other countries. Here lived the Khans of the Golden Horde, who kept
+ Russia in subjection for two centuries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In conquering Russia the Mongols had no wish to possess themselves of the
+ soil, or to take into their own hands the local administration. What they
+ wanted was not land, of which they had enough and to spare, but movable
+ property which they might enjoy without giving up their pastoral, nomadic
+ life. They applied, therefore, to Russia the same method of extracting
+ supplies as they had used in other countries. As soon as their authority
+ had been formally acknowledged they sent officials into the country to
+ number the inhabitants and to collect an amount of tribute proportionate
+ to the population. This was a severe burden for the people, not only on
+ account of the sum demanded, but also on account of the manner in which it
+ was raised. The exactions and cruelty of the tax-gatherers led to local
+ insurrections, and the insurrections were of course always severely
+ punished. But there was never any general military occupation of the
+ country or any wholesale confiscations of land, and the existing political
+ organisation was left undisturbed. The modern method of dealing with
+ annexed provinces was totally unknown to the Mongols. The Khans never
+ thought of attempting to denationalise their Russian subjects. They
+ demanded simply an oath of allegiance from the Princes* and a certain sum
+ of tribute from the people. The vanquished were allowed to retain their
+ land, their religion, their language, their courts of justice, and all
+ their other institutions.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * During the Mongol domination Russia was composed of a
+ large number of independent principalities.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The nature of the Mongol domination is well illustrated by the policy
+ which the conquerors adopted towards the Russian Church. For more than
+ half a century after the conquest the religion of the Tartars was a
+ mixture of Buddhism and Paganism, with traces of Sabaeism or fire-worship.
+ During this period Christianity was more than simply tolerated. The Grand
+ Khan Kuyuk caused a Christian chapel to be erected near his domicile, and
+ one of his successors, Khubilai, was in the habit of publicly taking part
+ in the Easter festivals. In 1261 the Khan of the Golden Horde allowed the
+ Russians to found a bishopric in his capital, and several members of his
+ family adopted Christianity. One of them even founded a monastery, and
+ became a saint of the Russian Church! The Orthodox clergy were exempted
+ from the poll-tax, and in the charters granted to them it was expressly
+ declared that if any one committed blasphemy against the faith of the
+ Russians he should be put to death. Some time afterwards the Golden Horde
+ was converted to Islam, but the Khans did not on that account change their
+ policy. They continued to favour the clergy, and their protection was long
+ remembered. Many generations later, when the property of the Church was
+ threatened by the autocratic power, refractory ecclesiastics contrasted
+ the policy of the Orthodox Sovereign with that of the "godless Tartars,"
+ much to the advantage of the latter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first there was and could be very little mutual confidence between the
+ conquerors and the conquered. The Princes anxiously looked for an
+ opportunity of throwing off the galling yoke, and the people chafed under
+ the exactions and cruelty of the tribute-collectors, whilst the Khans took
+ precautions to prevent insurrection, and threatened to devastate the
+ country if their authority was not respected. But in the course of time
+ this mutual distrust and hostility greatly lessened. When the Princes
+ found by experience that all attempts at resistance were fruitless, they
+ became reconciled to their new position, and instead of seeking to throw
+ off the Khan's authority, they tried to gain his favour, in the hope of
+ forwarding their personal interests. For this purpose they paid frequent
+ visits to the Tartar Suzerain, made rich presents to his wives and
+ courtiers, received from him charters confirming their authority, and
+ sometimes even married members of his family. Some of them used the favour
+ thus acquired for extending their possessions at the expense of
+ neighbouring Princes of their own race, and did not hesitate to call in
+ Tartar hordes to their assistance. The Khans, in their turn, placed
+ greater confidence in their vassals, entrusted them with the task of
+ collecting the tribute, recalled their own officials who were a constant
+ eyesore to the people, and abstained from all interference in the internal
+ affairs of the principalities so long as the tribute was regularly paid.
+ The Princes acted, in short, as the Khan's lieutenants, and became to a
+ certain extent Tartarised. Some of them carried this policy so far that
+ they were reproached by the people with "loving beyond measure the Tartars
+ and their language, and with giving them too freely land, and gold, and
+ goods of every kind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had the Khans of the Golden Horde been prudent, far-seeing statesmen, they
+ might have long retained their supremacy over Russia. In reality they
+ showed themselves miserably deficient in political talent. Seeking merely
+ to extract from the country as much tribute as possible, they overlooked
+ all higher considerations, and by this culpable shortsightedness prepared
+ their own political ruin. Instead of keeping all the Russian Princes on
+ the same level and thereby rendering them all equally feeble, they were
+ constantly bribed or cajoled into giving to one or more of their vassals a
+ pre-eminence over the others. At first this pre-eminence consisted in
+ little more than the empty title of Grand Prince; but the vassals thus
+ favoured soon transformed the barren distinction into a genuine power by
+ arrogating to themselves the exclusive right of holding direct
+ communications with the Horde, and compelling the minor Princes to deliver
+ to them the Mongol tribute. If any of the lesser Princes refused to
+ acknowledge this intermediate authority, the Grand Prince could easily
+ crush them by representing them at the Horde as rebels. Such an accusation
+ would cause the accused to be summoned before the Supreme Tribunal, where
+ the procedure was extremely summary and the Grand Prince had always the
+ means of obtaining a decision in his own favour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the Princes who strove in this way to increase their influence, the
+ most successful were the Grand Princes of Moscow. They were not a
+ chivalrous race, or one with which the severe moralist can sympathise, but
+ they were largely endowed with cunning, tact, and perseverance, and were
+ little hampered by conscientious scruples. Having early discovered that
+ the liberal distribution of money at the Tartar court was the surest means
+ of gaining favour, they lived parsimoniously at home and spent their
+ savings at the Horde. To secure the continuance of the favour thus
+ acquired, they were ready to form matrimonial alliances with the Khan's
+ family, and to act zealously as his lieutenants. When Novgorod, the
+ haughty, turbulent republic, refused to pay the yearly tribute, they
+ quelled the insurrection and punished the leaders; and when the
+ inhabitants of Tver rose against the Tartars and compelled their Prince to
+ make common cause with them, the wily Muscovite hastened to the Tartar
+ court and received from the Khan the revolted principality, with 50,000
+ Tartars to support his authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus those cunning Moscow Princes "loved the Tartars beyond measure" so
+ long as the Khan was irresistibly powerful, but as his power waned they
+ stood forth as his rivals. When the Golden Horde, like the great Empire of
+ which it had once formed a part, fell to pieces in the fifteenth century,
+ these ambitious Princes read the signs of the times, and put themselves at
+ the head of the liberation movement, which was at first unsuccessful, but
+ ultimately freed the country from the hated yoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this brief sketch of the Mongol domination the reader will readily
+ understand that it did not leave any deep, lasting impression on the
+ people. The invaders never settled in Russia proper, and never amalgamated
+ with the native population. So long as they retained their semi-pagan,
+ semi-Buddhistic religion, a certain number of their notables became
+ Christians and were absorbed by the Russian Noblesse; but as soon as the
+ Horde adopted Islam this movement was arrested. There was no blending of
+ the two races such as has taken place&mdash;and is still taking place&mdash;between
+ the Russian peasantry and the Finnish tribes of the North. The Russians
+ remained Christians, and the Tartars remained Mahometans; and this
+ difference of religion raised an impassable barrier between the two
+ nationalities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must, however, be admitted that the Tartar domination, though it had
+ little influence on the life and habits of the people, had a considerable
+ influence on the political development of the nation. At the time of the
+ conquest Russia was composed of a large number of independent
+ principalities, all governed by descendants of Rurik. As these
+ principalities were not geographical or ethnographical units, but mere
+ artificial, arbitrarily defined districts, which were regularly subdivided
+ or combined according to the hereditary rights of the Princes, it is
+ highly probable that they would in any case have been sooner or later
+ united under one sceptre; but it is quite certain that the policy of the
+ Khans helped to accelerate this unification and to create the autocratic
+ power which has since been wielded by the Tsars. If the principalities had
+ been united without foreign interference we should probably have found in
+ the united State some form of political organisation corresponding to that
+ which existed in the component parts&mdash;some mixed form of government,
+ in which the political power would have been more or less equally divided
+ between the Tsar and the people. The Tartar rule interrupted this normal
+ development by extinguishing all free political life. The first Tsars of
+ Muscovy were the political descendants, not of the old independent
+ Princes, but of the Mongol Khans. It may be said, therefore, that the
+ autocratic power, which has been during the last four centuries out of all
+ comparison the most important factor in Russian history, was in a certain
+ sense created by the Mongol domination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE COSSACKS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Lawlessness on the Steppe&mdash;Slave-markets of the Crimea&mdash;The
+ Military Cordon and the Free Cossacks&mdash;The Zaporovian Commonwealth
+ Compared with Sparta and with the Mediaeval Military Orders&mdash;The
+ Cossacks of the Don, of the Volga, and of the Ural&mdash;Border Warfare&mdash;The
+ Modern Cossacks&mdash;Land Tenure among the Cossacks of the Don&mdash;The
+ Transition from Pastoral to Agriculture Life&mdash;"Universal Law" of
+ Social Development&mdash;Communal versus Private Property&mdash;Flogging
+ as a Means of Land-registration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner had the Grand Princes of Moscow thrown off the Mongol yoke and
+ become independent Tsars of Muscovy than they began that eastward
+ territorial expansion which has been going on steadily ever since, and
+ which culminated in the occupation of Talienwan and Port Arthur. Ivan the
+ Terrible conquered the Khanates of Kazan and Astrakhan (1552-54) and
+ reduced to nominal subjection the Bashkir and Kirghiz tribes in the
+ vicinity of the Volga, but he did not thereby establish law and order on
+ the Steppe. The lawless tribes retained their old pastoral mode of life
+ and predatory habits, and harassed the Russian agricultural population of
+ the outlying provinces in the same way as the Red Indians in America used
+ to harass the white colonists of the Far West. A large section of the
+ Horde, inhabiting the Crimea and the Steppe to the north of the Black Sea,
+ escaped annexation by submitting to the Ottoman Turks and becoming
+ tributaries of the Sultan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Turks were at that time a formidable power, with which the Tsars of
+ Muscovy were too weak to cope successfully, and the Khan of the Crimea
+ could always, when hard pressed by his northern neighbours, obtain
+ assistance from Constantinople. This potentate exercised a nominal
+ authority over the pastoral tribes which roamed on the Steppe between the
+ Crimea and the Russian frontier, but he had neither the power nor the
+ desire to control their aggressive tendencies. Their raids in Russian and
+ Polish territory ensured, among other advantages, a regular and plentiful
+ supply of slaves, which formed the chief article of export from Kaffa&mdash;the
+ modern Theodosia&mdash;and from the other seaports of the coast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of this slave trade, which flourished down to 1783, when the Crimea was
+ finally conquered and annexed by Russia, we have a graphic account by an
+ eye-witness, a Lithuanian traveller of the sixteenth century. "Ships from
+ Asia," he says, "bring arms, clothes, and horses to the Crimean Tartars,
+ and start on the homeward voyage laden with slaves. It is for this kind of
+ merchandise alone that the Crimean markets are remarkable. Slaves may be
+ always had for sale as a pledge or as a present, and every one rich enough
+ to have a horse deals in them. If a man wishes to buy clothes, arms, or
+ horses, and does not happen to have at the moment any slaves, he takes on
+ credit the articles required, and makes a formal promise to deliver at a
+ certain time a certain number of people of our blood&mdash;being convinced
+ that he can get by that time the requisite number. And these promises are
+ always accurately fulfilled, as if those who made them had always a supply
+ of our people in their courtyards. A Jewish money-changer, sitting at the
+ gate of Tauris and seeing constantly the countless multitude of our
+ countrymen led in as captives, asked us whether there still remained any
+ people in our land, and whence came such a multitude of them. The stronger
+ of these captives, branded on the forehead and cheeks and manacled or
+ fettered, are tortured by severe labour all day, and are shut up in dark
+ cells at night. They are kept alive by small quantities of food, composed
+ chiefly of the flesh of animals that have died&mdash;putrid, covered with
+ maggots, disgusting even to dogs. Women, who are more tender, are treated
+ in a different fashion; some of them who can sing and play are employed to
+ amuse the guests at festivals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the slaves are led out for sale they walk to the marketplace in
+ single file, like storks on the wing, in whole dozens, chained together by
+ the neck, and are there sold by auction. The auctioneer shouts loudly that
+ they are 'the newest arrivals, simple, and not cunning, lately captured
+ from the people of the kingdom (Poland), and not from Muscovy'; for the
+ Muscovite race, being crafty and deceitful, does not bring a good price.
+ This kind of merchandise is appraised with great accuracy in the Crimea,
+ and is bought by foreign merchants at a high price, in order to be sold at
+ a still higher rate to blacker nations, such as Saracens, Persians,
+ Indians, Arabs, Syrians, and Assyrians. When a purchase is made the teeth
+ are examined, to see that they are neither few nor discoloured. At the
+ same time the more hidden parts of the body are carefully inspected, and
+ if a mole, excrescence, wound, or other latent defect is discovered, the
+ bargain is rescinded. But notwithstanding these investigations the cunning
+ slave-dealers and brokers succeed in cheating the buyers; for when they
+ have valuable boys and girls, they do not at once produce them, but first
+ fatten them, clothe them in silk, and put powder and rouge on their
+ cheeks, so as to sell them at a better price. Sometimes beautiful and
+ perfect maidens of our nation bring their weight in gold. This takes place
+ in all the towns of the peninsula, but especially in Kaffa."*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Michalonis Litvani, "De moribus Tartarorum Fragmina," X.,
+ Basilliae, 1615.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ To protect the agricultural population of the Steppe against the raids of
+ these thieving, cattle-lifting, kidnapping neighbours, the Tsars of
+ Muscovy and the Kings of Poland built forts, constructed palisades, dug
+ trenches, and kept up a regular military cordon. The troops composing this
+ cordon were called Cossacks; but these were not the "Free Cossacks" best
+ known to history and romance. These latter lived beyond the frontier on
+ the debatable land which lay between the two hostile races, and there they
+ formed self-governing military communities. Each one of the rivers flowing
+ southwards&mdash;the Dnieper, the Don, the Volga, and the Yaik or Ural&mdash;was
+ held by a community of these Free Cossacks, and no one, whether Christian
+ or Tartar, was allowed to pass through their territory without their
+ permission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Officially the Free Cossacks were Russians, for they professed to be
+ champions of Orthodox Christianity, and&mdash;with the exception of those
+ of the Dnieper&mdash;loyal subjects of the Tsar; but in reality they were
+ something different. Though they were Russian by origin, language, and
+ sympathy, the habit of kidnapping Tartar women introduced among them a
+ certain admixture of Tartar blood. Though self-constituted champions of
+ Christianity and haters of Islam, they troubled themselves very little
+ with religion, and did not submit to the ecclesiastical authorities. As to
+ their religious status, it cannot be easily defined. Whilst professing
+ allegiance and devotion to the Tsar, they did not think it necessary to
+ obey him, except in so far as his orders suited their own convenience. And
+ the Tsar, it must be confessed, acted towards them in a similar fashion.
+ When he found it convenient he called them his faithful subjects; and when
+ complaints were made to him about their raids in Turkish territory, he
+ declared that they were not his subjects, but runaways and brigands, and
+ that the Sultan might punish them as he saw fit. At the same time, the
+ so-called runaways and brigands regularly received supplies and ammunition
+ from Moscow, as is amply proved by recently-published documents. Down to
+ the middle of the seventeenth century the Cossacks of the Dnieper stood in
+ a similar relation to the Polish kings; but at that time they threw off
+ their allegiance to Poland, and became subjects of the Tsars of Muscovy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of these semi-independent military communities, which formed a continuous
+ barrier along the southern and southeastern frontier, the most celebrated
+ were the Zaporovians* of the Dnieper, and the Cossacks of the Don.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The name "Zaporovians," by which they are known in the
+ West, is a corruption of the Russian word Zaporozhtsi, which
+ means "Those who live beyond the rapids."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Zaporovian Commonwealth has been compared sometimes to ancient Sparta,
+ and sometimes to the mediaeval Military Orders, but it had in reality
+ quite a different character. In Sparta the nobles kept in subjection a
+ large population of slaves, and were themselves constantly under the
+ severe discipline of the magistrates. These Cossacks of the Dnieper, on
+ the contrary, lived by fishing, hunting, and marauding, and knew nothing
+ of discipline, except in time of war. Amongst all the inhabitants of the
+ Setch&mdash;so the fortified camp was called&mdash;there reigned the most
+ perfect equality. The common saying, "Bear patiently, Cossack; you will
+ one day be Ataman!" was often realised; for every year the office-bearers
+ laid down the insignia of office in presence of the general assembly, and
+ after thanking the brotherhood for the honour they had enjoyed, retired to
+ their former position of common Cossack. At the election which followed
+ this ceremony any member could be chosen chief of his kuren, or company,
+ and any chief of a kuren could be chosen Ataman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The comparison of these bold Borderers with the mediaeval Military Orders
+ is scarcely less forced. They call themselves, indeed, Lytsars&mdash;a
+ corruption of the Russian word Ritsar, which is in its turn a corruption
+ of the German Ritter&mdash;talked of knightly honour (lytsarskaya
+ tchest'), and sometimes proclaimed themselves the champions of Greek
+ Orthodoxy against the Roman Catholicism of the Poles and the Mahometanism
+ of the Tartars; but religion occupied in their minds a very secondary
+ place. Their great object in life was the acquisition of booty. To attain
+ this object they lived in intermittent warfare with the Tartars, lifted
+ their cattle, pillaged their aouls, swept the Black Sea in flotillas of
+ small boats, and occasionally sacked important coast towns, such as Varna
+ and Sinope. When Tartar booty could not be easily obtained, they turned
+ their attention to the Slavonic populations; and when hard pressed by
+ Christian potentates, they did not hesitate to put themselves under the
+ protection of the Sultan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Cossacks of the Don, of the Volga, and of the Ural had a somewhat
+ different organisation. They had no fortified camp like the Setch, but
+ lived in villages, and assembled as necessity demanded. As they were
+ completely beyond the sphere of Polish influence, they knew nothing about
+ "knightly honour" and similar conceptions of Western chivalry; they even
+ adopted many Tartar customs, and loved in time of peace to strut about in
+ gorgeous Tartar costumes. Besides this, they were nearly all emigrants
+ from Great Russia, and mostly Old Ritualists or Sectarians, whilst the
+ Zaporovians were Little Russians and Orthodox.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These military communities rendered valuable service to Russia. The best
+ means of protecting the southern frontier was to have as allies a large
+ body of men leading the same kind of life and capable of carrying on the
+ same kind of warfare as the nomadic marauders; and such a body of men were
+ the Free Cossacks. The sentiment of self-preservation and the desire of
+ booty kept them constantly on the alert. By sending out small parties in
+ all directions, by "procuring tongues"&mdash;that is to say, by kidnapping
+ and torturing straggling Tartars with a view to extracting information
+ from them&mdash;and by keeping spies in the enemy's territory, they were
+ generally apprised beforehand of any intended incursion. When danger
+ threatened, the ordinary precautions were redoubled. Day and night patrols
+ kept watch at the points where the enemy was expected, and as soon as sure
+ signs of his approach were discovered a pile of tarred barrels prepared
+ for the purpose was fired to give the alarm. Rapidly the signal was
+ repeated at one point of observation after another, and by this primitive
+ system of telegraphy in the course of a few hours the whole district was
+ up in arms. If the invaders were not too numerous, they were at once
+ attacked and driven back. If they could not be successfully resisted, they
+ were allowed to pass; but a troop of Cossacks was sent to pillage their
+ aouls in their absence, whilst another and larger force was collected, in
+ order to intercept them when they were returning home laden with booty.
+ Thus many a nameless battle was fought on the trackless Steppe, and many
+ brave men fell unhonoured and unsung:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Illacrymabiles Urgentur ignotique longa Nocte, carent quia vate sacro."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding these valuable services, the Cossack communities were a
+ constant source of diplomatic difficulties and political dangers. As they
+ paid very little attention to the orders of the Government, they supplied
+ the Sultan with any number of casi belli, and were often ready to turn
+ their arms against the power to which they professed allegiance. During
+ "the troublous times," for example, when the national existence was
+ endangered by civil strife and foreign invasion, they overran the country,
+ robbing, pillaging, and burning as they were wont to do in the Tartar
+ aouls. At a later period the Don Cossacks twice raised formidable
+ insurrections&mdash;first under Stenka Razin (1670), and secondly under
+ Pugatchef (1773)&mdash;and during the war between Peter the Great and
+ Charles XII. of Sweden the Zaporovians took the side of the Swedish king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Government naturally strove to put an end to this danger, and
+ ultimately succeeded. All the Cossacks were deprived of their
+ independence, but the fate of the various communities was different. Those
+ of the Volga were transfered to the Terek, where they had abundant
+ occupation in guarding the frontier against the incursions of the Eastern
+ Caucasian tribes. The Zaporovians held tenaciously to their "Dnieper
+ liberties," and resisted all interference, till they were forcibly
+ disbanded in the time of Catherine II. The majority of them fled to
+ Turkey, where some of their descendants are still to be found, and the
+ remainder were settled on the Kuban, where they could lead their old life
+ by carrying on an irregular warfare with the tribes of the Western
+ Caucasus. Since the capture of Shamyl and the pacification of the
+ Caucasus, this Cossack population of the Kuban and the Terek, extending in
+ an unbroken line from the Sea of Azof to the Caspian, have been able to
+ turn their attention to peaceful pursuits, and now raise large quantities
+ of wheat for exportation; but they still retain their martial bearing, and
+ some of them regret the good old times when a brush with the Circassians
+ was an ordinary occurrence and the work of tilling the soil was often
+ diversified with a more exciting kind of occupation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Cossacks of the Ural and the Don have been allowed to remain in their
+ old homes, but they have been deprived of their independence and
+ self-government, and their social organisation has been completely
+ changed. The boisterous popular assemblies which formerly decided all
+ public affairs have been abolished, and the custom of choosing the Ataman
+ and other office-bearers by popular election has been replaced by a system
+ of regular promotion, according to rules elaborated in St. Petersburg. The
+ officers and their families now compose a kind of hereditary aristocracy
+ which has succeeded in appropriating, by means of Imperial grants, a large
+ portion of the land which was formerly common property. As the Empire
+ expanded in Asia the system of protecting the parties by Cossack colonists
+ was extended eastwards, so now there is a belt of Cossack territory
+ stretching almost without interruption from the banks of the Don to the
+ coast of the Pacific. It is divided into eleven sections, in each of which
+ is settled a Cossack corps with a separate administration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When universal military service was introduced, in 1873, the Cossacks were
+ brought under the new law, but in order to preserve their military
+ traditions and habits they were allowed to retain, with certain
+ modifications, their old organisation, rights, and privileges. In return
+ for a large amount of fertile land and exemption from direct taxation,
+ they have to equip themselves at their own expense, and serve for twenty
+ years, of which three are spent in preparatory training, twelve in the
+ active army, and five in the reserve. This system gives to the army a
+ contingent of about 330,000 men&mdash;divided into 890 squadrons and 108
+ infantry companies&mdash;with 236 guns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Cossacks in active service are to be met with in all parts of the
+ Empire, from the Prussian to the Chinese frontier. In the Asiatic
+ Provinces their services are invaluable. Capable of enduring an incredible
+ amount of fatigue and all manner of privations, they can live and thrive
+ in conditions which would soon disable regular troops. The capacity of
+ self-adaptation, which is characteristic of the Russian people generally,
+ is possessed by them in the highest degree. When placed on some distant
+ Asiatic frontier they can at once transform themselves into squatters&mdash;building
+ their own houses, raising crops of grain, and living as colonists without
+ neglecting their military duties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have sometimes heard it asserted by military men that the Cossack
+ organisation is an antiquated institution, and that the soldiers which it
+ produces, however useful they may be in Central Asia, would be of little
+ service in regular European warfare. Whether this view, which received
+ some confirmation in the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78, is true or false I
+ cannot pretend to say, for it is a subject on which a civilian has no
+ right to speak; but I may remark that the Cossacks themselves are not by
+ any means of that opinion. They regard themselves as the most valuable
+ troops which the Tsar possesses, believing themselves capable of
+ performing anything within the bounds of human possibility, and a good
+ deal that lies beyond that limit. More than once Don Cossacks have assured
+ me that if the Tsar had allowed them to fit out a flotilla of small boats
+ during the Crimean War they would have captured the British fleet, as
+ their ancestors used to capture Turkish galleys on the Black Sea!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In old times, throughout the whole territory of the Don Cossacks,
+ agriculture was prohibited on pain of death. It is generally supposed that
+ this measure was adopted with a view to preserve the martial spirit of the
+ inhabitants, but it may be explained otherwise. The great majority of the
+ Cossacks, averse to all regular, laborious occupations, wished to live by
+ fishing, hunting, cattle-breeding, and marauding, but there was always
+ amongst them a considerable number of immigrants&mdash;runaway serfs from
+ the interior&mdash;who had been accustomed to live by agriculture. These
+ latter wished to raise crops on the fertile virgin soil, and if they had
+ been allowed to do so they would to some extent have spoiled the pastures.
+ We have here, I believe, the true reason for the above-mentioned
+ prohibition, and this view is strongly confirmed by analogous facts which
+ I have observed in another locality. In the Kirghiz territory the poorer
+ inhabitants of the aouls near the frontier, having few or no cattle, wish
+ to let part of the common land to the neighbouring Russian peasantry for
+ agricultural purposes; but the richer inhabitants, who possess flocks and
+ herds, strenuously oppose this movement, and would doubtless prohibit it
+ under pain of death if they had the power, because all agricultural
+ encroachments diminish the pasture-land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever was the real reason of the prohibition, practical necessity
+ proved in the long run too strong for the anti-agriculturists. As the
+ population augmented and the opportunities for marauding decreased, the
+ majority had to overcome their repugnance to husbandry; and soon large
+ patches of ploughed land or waving grain were to be seen in the vicinity
+ of the stanitsas, as the Cossack villages are termed. At first there was
+ no attempt to regulate this new use of the ager publicus. Each Cossack who
+ wished to raise a crop ploughed and sowed wherever he thought fit, and
+ retained as long as he chose the land thus appropriated; and when the soil
+ began to show signs of exhaustion he abandoned his plot and ploughed
+ elsewhere. But this unregulated use of the Communal property could not
+ long continue. As the number of agriculturists increased, quarrels
+ frequently arose, and sometimes terminated in bloodshed. Still worse evils
+ appeared when markets were created in the vicinity, and it became possible
+ to sell the grain for exportation. In some stanitsas the richer families
+ appropriated enormous quantities of the common land by using several teams
+ of oxen, or by hiring peasants in the nearest villages to come and plough
+ for them; and instead of abandoning the land after raising two or three
+ crops they retained possession of it, and came to regard it as their
+ private property. Thus the whole of the arable land, or at least the best
+ part of it, became actually, if not legally, the private property of a few
+ families, whilst the less energetic or less fortunate inhabitants of the
+ stanitsa had only parcels of comparatively barren soil, or had no land
+ whatever, and became mere agricultural labourers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a time this injustice was remedied. The landless members justly
+ complained that they had to bear the same burdens as those who possessed
+ the land, and that therefore they ought to enjoy the same privileges. The
+ old spirit of equality was still strong amongst them, and they ultimately
+ succeeded in asserting their rights. In accordance with their demands the
+ appropriated land was confiscated by the Commune, and the system of
+ periodical redistributions was introduced. By this system each adult male
+ possesses a share of the land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These facts tend to throw light on some of the dark questions of social
+ development in its early stages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So long as a village community leads a purely pastoral life, and possesses
+ an abundance of land, there is no reason why the individuals or the
+ families of which it is composed should divide the land into private lots,
+ and there are very potent reasons why they should not adopt such a course.
+ To give the division of the land any practical significance, it would be
+ necessary to raise fences of some kind, and these fences, requiring for
+ their construction a certain amount of labour, would prove merely a
+ useless encumbrance, for it is much more convenient that all the sheep and
+ cattle should graze together. If there is a scarcity of pasture, and
+ consequently a conflict of interest among the families, the enjoyment of
+ the common land will be regulated not by raising fences, but by simply
+ limiting the number of sheep and cattle which each family is entitled to
+ put upon the pasturage, as is done in many Russian villages at the present
+ day. When any one desires to keep more sheep and cattle than the maximum
+ to which he is entitled, he pays to the others a certain compensation.
+ Thus, we see, in pastoral life the dividing of the common land is
+ unnecessary and inexpedient, and consequently private property in land is
+ not likely to come into existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the introduction of agriculture appears a tendency to divide the land
+ among the families composing the community, for each family living by
+ husbandry requires a definite portion of the soil. If the land suitable
+ for agricultural purposes be plentiful, each head of a family may be
+ allowed to take possession of as much of it as he requires, as was
+ formerly done in the Cossack stanitsas; if, on the contrary, the area of
+ arable land is small, as is the case in some Bashkir aouls, there will
+ probably be a regular allotment of it among the families.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the tendency to divide the land into definite portions arises a
+ conflict between the principle of communal and the principle of private
+ property. Those who obtain definite portions of the soil are in general
+ likely to keep them and transmit them to their descendants. In a country,
+ however, like the Steppe&mdash;and it is only of such countries that I am
+ at present speaking&mdash;the nature of the soil and the system of
+ agriculture militate against this conversion of simple possession into a
+ right of property. A plot of land is commonly cultivated for only three or
+ four years in succession. It is then abandoned for at least double that
+ period, and the cultivators remove to some other portion of the communal
+ territory. After a time, it is true, they return to the old portion, which
+ has been in the meantime lying fallow; but as the soil is tolerably equal
+ in quality, the families or individuals have no reason to desire the
+ precise plots which they formerly possessed. Under such circumstances the
+ principle of private property in the land is not likely to strike root;
+ each family insists on possessing a certain QUANTITY rather than a certain
+ PLOT of land, and contents itself with a right of usufruct, whilst the
+ right of property remains in the hands of the Commune; and it must not be
+ forgotten that the difference between usufruct and property here is of
+ great practical importance, for so long as the Commune retains the right
+ of property it may re-allot the land in any way it thinks fit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the population increases and land becomes less plentiful, the primitive
+ method of agriculture above alluded to gives place to a less primitive
+ method, commonly known as "the three-field system," according to which the
+ cultivators do not migrate periodically from one part of the communal
+ territory to another, but till always the same fields, and are obliged to
+ manure the plots which they occupy. The principle of communal property
+ rarely survives this change, for by long possession the families acquire a
+ prescriptive right to the portions which they cultivate, and those who
+ manure their land well naturally object to exchange it for land which has
+ been held by indolent, improvident neighbours. In Russia, however, this
+ change has not destroyed the principle of communal property. Though the
+ three-field system has been in use for many generations in the central
+ provinces, the communal principle, with its periodical re-allotment of the
+ land, still remains intact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the student of sociology the past history and actual condition of the
+ Don Cossacks present many other features equally interesting and
+ instructive. He may there see, for instance, how an aristocracy can be
+ created by military promotion, and how serfage may originate and become a
+ recognised institution without any legislative enactment. If he takes an
+ interest in peculiar manifestations of religious thought and feeling, he
+ will find a rich field of investigation in the countless religious sects;
+ and if he is a collector of quaint old customs, he will not lack
+ occupation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One curious custom, which has very recently died out, I may here mention
+ by way of illustration. As the Cossacks knew very little about
+ land-surveying, and still less about land-registration, the precise
+ boundary between two contiguous yurts&mdash;as the communal land of a
+ stanitsa was called&mdash;was often a matter of uncertainty and a fruitful
+ source of disputes. When the boundary was once determined, the following
+ method of registering it was employed. All the boys of the two stanitsas
+ were collected and driven in a body like sheep to the intervening
+ frontier. The whole population then walked along the frontier that had
+ been agreed upon, and at each landmark a number of boys were soundly
+ whipped and allowed to run home! This was done in the hope that the
+ victims would remember, as long as they lived, the spot where they had
+ received their unmerited castigation.* The device, I have been assured,
+ was generally very effective, but it was not always quite successful.
+ Whether from the castigation not being sufficiently severe, or from some
+ other defect in the method, it sometimes happened that disputes afterwards
+ arose, and the whipped boys, now grown up to manhood, gave conflicting
+ testimony. When such a case occurred the following expedient was adopted.
+ One of the oldest inhabitants was chosen as arbiter, and made to swear on
+ the Scriptures that he would act honestly to the best of his knowledge;
+ then taking an Icon in his hand, he walked along what he believed to be
+ the old frontier. Whether he made mistakes or not, his decision was
+ accepted by both parties and regarded as final. This custom existed in
+ some stanitsas down to the year 1850, when the boundaries were clearly
+ determined by Government officials.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * A custom of this kind, I am told, existed not very long
+ ago in England and is still spoken of as "the beating of the
+ bounds."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ FOREIGN COLONISTS ON THE STEPPE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The Steppe&mdash;Variety of Races, Languages, and Religions&mdash;The
+ German Colonists&mdash;In What Sense the Russians are an Imitative People&mdash;The
+ Mennonites&mdash;Climate and Arboriculture&mdash;Bulgarian Colonists&mdash;Tartar-Speaking
+ Greeks&mdash;Jewish Agriculturists&mdash;Russification&mdash;A Circassian
+ Scotchman&mdash;Numerical Strength of the Foreign Element.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In European Russia the struggle between agriculture and nomadic barbarism
+ is now a thing of the past, and the fertile Steppe, which was for
+ centuries a battle-ground of the Aryan and Turanian races, has been
+ incorporated into the dominions of the Tsar. The nomadic tribes have been
+ partly driven out and partly pacified and parked in "reserves," and the
+ territory which they so long and so stubbornly defended is now studded
+ with peaceful villages and tilled by laborious agriculturists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In traversing this region the ordinary tourist will find little to
+ interest him. He will see nothing which he can possibly dignify by the
+ name of scenery, and he may journey on for many days without having any
+ occasion to make an entry in his note-book. If he should happen, however,
+ to be an ethnologist and linguist, he may find occupation, for he will
+ here meet with fragments of many different races and a variety of foreign
+ tongues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This ethnological variety is the result of a policy inaugurated by
+ Catherine II. So long as the southern frontier was pushed forward slowly,
+ the acquired territory was regularly filled up by Russian peasants from
+ the central provinces who were anxious to obtain more land and more
+ liberty than they enjoyed in their native villages; but during "the
+ glorious age of Catherine" the frontier was pushed forward so rapidly that
+ the old method of spontaneous emigration no longer sufficed to people the
+ annexed territory. The Empress had recourse, therefore, to organised
+ emigration from foreign countries. Her diplomatic representatives in
+ Western Europe tried to induce artisans and peasants to emigrate to
+ Russia, and special agents were sent to various countries to supplement
+ the efforts of the diplomatists. Thousands accepted the invitation, and
+ were for the most part settled on the land which had been recently the
+ pasture-ground of the nomadic hordes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This policy was adopted by succeeding sovereigns, and the consequence of
+ it has been that Southern Russia now contains a variety of races such as
+ is to be found, perhaps, nowhere else in Europe. The official statistics
+ of New Russia alone&mdash;that is to say, the provinces of Ekaterinoslaf,
+ Tauride, Kherson, and Bessarabia&mdash;enumerate the following
+ nationalities: Great Russians, Little Russians, Poles, Servians,
+ Montenegrins, Bulgarians, Moldavians, Germans, English, Swedes, Swiss,
+ French, Italians, Greeks, Armenians, Tartars, Mordwa, Jews, and Gypsies.
+ The religions are almost equally numerous. The statistics speak of Greek
+ Orthodox, Roman Catholics, Gregorians, Lutherans, Calvinists, Anglicans,
+ Mennonites, Separatists, Pietists, Karaim Jews, Talmudists, Mahometans,
+ and numerous Russian sects, such as the Molokanye and the Skoptsi or
+ Eunuchs. America herself could scarcely show a more motley list in her
+ statistics of population.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is but fair to state that the above list, though literally correct,
+ does not give a true idea of the actual population. The great body of the
+ inhabitants are Russian and Orthodox, whilst several of the nationalities
+ named are represented by a small number of souls&mdash;some of them, such
+ as the French, being found exclusively in the towns. Still, the variety
+ even in the rural population is very great. Once, in the space of three
+ days, and using only the most primitive means of conveyance, I visited
+ colonies of Greeks, Germans, Servians, Bulgarians, Montenegrins, and Jews.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the foreign colonists the Germans are by far the most numerous. The
+ object of the Government in inviting them to settle in the country was
+ that they should till the unoccupied land and thereby increase the
+ national wealth, and that they should at the same time exercise a
+ civilising influence on the Russian peasantry in their vicinity. In this
+ latter respect they have totally failed to fulfil their mission. A Russian
+ village, situated in the midst of German colonies, shows generally, so far
+ as I could observe, no signs of German influence. Each nationality lives
+ more majorum, and holds as little communication as possible with the
+ other. The muzhik observes carefully&mdash;for he is very curious&mdash;the
+ mode of life of his more advanced neighbours, but he never thinks of
+ adopting it. He looks upon Germans almost as beings of a different world&mdash;as
+ a wonderfully cunning and ingenious people, who have been endowed by
+ Providence with peculiar qualities not possessed by ordinary Orthodox
+ humanity. To him it seems in the nature of things that Germans should live
+ in large, clean, well-built houses, in the same way as it is in the nature
+ of things that birds should build nests; and as it has probably never
+ occurred to a human being to build a nest for himself and his family, so
+ it never occurs to a Russian peasant to build a house on the German model.
+ Germans are Germans, and Russians are Russians&mdash;and there is nothing
+ more to be said on the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This stubbornly conservative spirit of the peasantry who live in the
+ neighbourhood of Germans seems to give the lie direct to the oft-repeated
+ and universally believed assertion that Russians are an imitative people
+ strongly disposed to adopt the manners and customs of any foreigners with
+ whom they may come in contact. The Russian, it is said, changes his
+ nationality as easily as he changes his coat, and derives great
+ satisfaction from wearing some nationality that does not belong to him;
+ but here we have an important fact which appears to prove the contrary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The truth is that in this matter we must distinguish between the Noblesse
+ and the peasantry. The nobles are singularly prone to adopt foreign
+ manners, customs, and institutions; the peasants, on the contrary, are as
+ a rule decidedly conservative. It must not, however, be supposed that this
+ proceeds from a difference of race; the difference is to be explained by
+ the past history of the two classes. Like all other peoples, the Russians
+ are strongly conservative so long as they remain in what may be termed
+ their primitive moral habitat&mdash;that is to say, so long as external
+ circumstances do not force them out of their accustomed traditional
+ groove. The Noblesse were long ago violently forced out of their old
+ groove by the reforming Tsars, and since that time they have been so
+ constantly driven hither and thither by foreign influences that they have
+ never been able to form a new one. Thus they easily enter upon any new
+ path which seems to them profitable or attractive. The great mass of the
+ people, on the contrary, too heavy to be thus lifted out of the guiding
+ influence of custom and tradition, are still animated with a strongly
+ conservative spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In confirmation of this view I may mention two facts which have often
+ attracted my attention. The first is that the Molokanye&mdash;a primitive
+ Evangelical sect of which I shall speak at length in the next chapter&mdash;succumb
+ gradually to German influence; by becoming heretics in religion they free
+ themselves from one of the strongest bonds attaching them to the past, and
+ soon become heretics in things secular. The second fact is that even the
+ Orthodox peasant, when placed by circumstances in some new sphere of
+ activity, readily adopts whatever seems profitable. Take, for example, the
+ peasants who abandon agriculture and embark in industrial enterprises;
+ finding themselves, as it were, in a new world, in which their old
+ traditional notions are totally inapplicable, they have no hesitation in
+ adopting foreign ideas and foreign inventions. And when once they have
+ chosen this new path, they are much more "go-ahead" than the Germans.
+ Freed alike from the trammels of hereditary conceptions and from the
+ prudence which experience generates, they often give a loose rein to their
+ impulsive character, and enter freely on the wildest speculations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The marked contrast presented by a German colony and a Russian village in
+ close proximity with each other is often used to illustrate the
+ superiority of the Teutonic over the Slavonic race, and in order to make
+ the contrast more striking, the Mennonite colonies are generally taken as
+ the representatives of the Germans. Without entering here on the general
+ question, I must say that this method of argumentation is scarcely fair.
+ The Mennonites, who formerly lived in the neighbourhood of Danzig and
+ emigrated from Prussia in order to escape the military conscription,
+ brought with them to their new home a large store of useful technical
+ knowledge and a considerable amount of capital, and they received a
+ quantity of land very much greater than the Russian peasants possess.
+ Besides this, they enjoyed until very recently several valuable
+ privileges. They were entirely exempted from military service and almost
+ entirely exempted from taxation. Altogether their lines fell in very
+ pleasant places. In material and moral well-being they stand as far above
+ the majority of the ordinary German colonists as these latter do above
+ their Russian neighbours. Even in the richest districts of Germany their
+ prosperity would attract attention. To compare these rich, privileged,
+ well-educated farmers with the poor, heavily taxed, uneducated peasantry,
+ and to draw from the comparison conclusions concerning the capabilities of
+ the two races, is a proceeding so absurd that it requires no further
+ comment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the wearied traveller who has been living for some time in Russian
+ villages, one of these Mennonite colonies seems an earthly paradise. In a
+ little hollow, perhaps by the side of a watercourse, he suddenly comes on
+ a long row of high-roofed houses half concealed in trees. The trees may be
+ found on closer inspection to be little better than mere saplings; but
+ after a long journey on the bare Steppe, where there is neither tree nor
+ bush of any kind, the foliage, scant as it is, appears singularly
+ inviting. The houses are large, well arranged, and kept in such thoroughly
+ good repair that they always appear to be newly built. The rooms are
+ plainly furnished, without any pretensions to elegance, but scrupulously
+ clean. Adjoining the house are the stable and byre, which would not
+ disgrace a model farm in Germany or England. In front is a spacious
+ courtyard, which has the appearance of being swept several times a day,
+ and behind there is a garden well stocked with vegetables. Fruit trees and
+ flowers are not very plentiful, for the climate is not favourable to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inhabitants are honest, frugal folk, somewhat sluggish of intellect
+ and indifferent to things lying beyond the narrow limits of their own
+ little world, but shrewd enough in all matters which they deem worthy of
+ their attention. If you arrive amongst them as a stranger you may be a
+ little chilled by the welcome you receive, for they are exclusive,
+ reserved, and distrustful, and do not much like to associate with those
+ who do not belong to their own sect; but if you can converse with them in
+ their mother tongue and talk about religious matters in an evangelical
+ tone, you may easily overcome their stiffness and exclusiveness.
+ Altogether such a village cannot be recommended for a lengthened sojourn,
+ for the severe order and symmetry which everywhere prevail would soon
+ prove irksome to any one having no Dutch blood in his veins;* but as a
+ temporary resting-place during a pilgrimage on the Steppe, when the
+ pilgrim is longing for a little cleanliness and comfort, it is very
+ agreeable.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The Mennonites were originally Dutchmen. Persecuted for
+ their religious views in the sixteenth century, a large
+ number of them accepted an invitation to settle in West
+ Prussia, where they helped to drain the great marshes
+ between Danzig, Elbing, and Marienburg. Here in the course
+ of time they forgot their native language. Their emigration
+ to Russia began in 1789.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The fact that these Mennonites and some other German colonies have
+ succeeded in rearing a few sickly trees has suggested to some fertile
+ minds the idea that the prevailing dryness of the climate, which is the
+ chief difficulty with which the agriculturist of that region has to
+ contend, might be to some extent counteracted by arboriculture on a large
+ scale. This scheme, though it has been seriously entertained by one of his
+ Majesty's ministers, must seem hardly practicable to any one who knows how
+ much labour and money the colonists have expended in creating that
+ agreeable shade which they love to enjoy in their leisure hours. If
+ climate is affected at all by the existence or non-existence of forests&mdash;a
+ point on which scientific men do not seem to be entirely agreed&mdash;any
+ palpable increase of the rainfall can be produced only by forests of
+ enormous extent, and it is hardly conceivable that these could be
+ artificially produced in Southern Russia. It is quite possible, however,
+ that local ameliorations may be effected. During a visit to the province
+ of Voronezh in 1903 I found that comparatively small plantations
+ diminished the effects of drought in their immediate vicinity by retaining
+ the moisture for a time in the soil and the surrounding atmosphere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the Mennonites and other Germans, the Bulgarian colonists deserve a
+ passing notice. They settled in this region much more recently, on the
+ land that was left vacant by the exodus of the Nogai Tartars after the
+ Crimean War. If I may judge of their condition by a mere flying visit, I
+ should say that in agriculture and domestic civilisation they are not very
+ far behind the majority of German colonists. Their houses are indeed small&mdash;so
+ small that one of them might almost be put into a single room of a
+ Mennonite's house; but there is an air of cleanliness and comfort about
+ them that would do credit to a German housewife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of all this, these Bulgarians were, I could easily perceive, by
+ no means delighted with their new home. The cause of their discontent, so
+ far as I could gather from the few laconic remarks which I extracted from
+ them, seemed to be this: Trusting to the highly coloured descriptions
+ furnished by the emigration agents who had induced them to change the rule
+ of the Sultan for the authority of the Tsar, they came to Russia with the
+ expectation of finding a fertile and beautiful Promised Land. Instead of a
+ land flowing with milk and honey, they received a tract of bare Steppe on
+ which even water could be obtained only with great difficulty&mdash;with
+ no shade to protect them from the heat of summer and nothing to shelter
+ them from the keen northern blasts that often sweep over those open
+ plains. As no adequate arrangements had been made for their reception,
+ they were quartered during the first winter on the German colonists, who,
+ being quite innocent of any Slavophil sympathies, were probably not very
+ hospitable to their uninvited guests. To complete their disappointment,
+ they found that they could not cultivate the vine, and that their mild,
+ fragrant tobacco, which is for them a necessary of life, could be obtained
+ only at a very high price. So disconsolate were they under this cruel
+ disenchantment that, at the time of my visit, they talked of returning to
+ their old homes in Turkey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As an example of the less prosperous colonists, I may mention the
+ Tartar-speaking Greeks in the neighbourhood of Mariupol, on the northern
+ shore of the Sea of Azof. Their ancestors lived in the Crimea, under the
+ rule of the Tartar Khans, and emigrated to Russia in the time of Catherine
+ II., before Crim Tartary was annexed to the Russian Empire. They have
+ almost entirely forgotten their old language, but have preserved their old
+ faith. In adopting the Tartar language they have adopted something of
+ Tartar indolence and apathy, and the natural consequence is that they are
+ poor and ignorant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But of all the colonists of this region the least prosperous are the Jews.
+ The Chosen People are certainly a most intelligent, industrious, frugal
+ race, and in all matters of buying, selling, and bartering they are
+ unrivalled among the nations of the earth, but they have been too long
+ accustomed to town life to be good tillers of the soil. These Jewish
+ colonies were founded as an experiment to see whether the Israelite could
+ be weaned from his traditionary pursuits and transferred to what some
+ economists call the productive section of society. The experiment has
+ failed, and the cause of the failure is not difficult to find. One has
+ merely to look at these men of gaunt visage and shambling gait, with their
+ loop-holed slippers, and black, threadbare coats reaching down to their
+ ankles, to understand that they are not in their proper sphere. Their
+ houses are in a most dilapidated condition, and their villages remind one
+ of the abomination of desolation spoken of by Daniel the Prophet. A great
+ part of their land is left uncultivated or let to colonists of a different
+ race. What little revenue they have is derived chiefly from trade of a
+ more or less clandestine nature.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Mr. Arnold White, who subsequently visited some of these
+ Jewish Colonies in connection with Baron Hirsch's
+ colonisation scheme, assured me that he found them in a much
+ more prosperous condition.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As Scandinavia was formerly called officina gentium&mdash;a workshop in
+ which new nations were made&mdash;so we may regard Southern Russia as a
+ workshop in which fragments of old nations are being melted down to form a
+ new, composite whole. It must be confessed, however, that the melting
+ process has as yet scarcely begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ National peculiarities are not obliterated so rapidly in Russia as in
+ America or in British colonies. Among the German colonists in Russia the
+ process of assimilation is hardly perceptible. Though their fathers and
+ grandfathers may have been born in the new country, they would consider it
+ an insult to be called Russians. They look down upon the Russian peasantry
+ as poor, ignorant, lazy, and dishonest, fear the officials on account of
+ their tyranny and extortion, preserve jealously their own language and
+ customs, rarely speak Russian well&mdash;sometimes not at all&mdash;and
+ never intermarry with those from whom they are separated by nationality
+ and religion. The Russian influence acts, however, more rapidly on the
+ Slavonic colonists&mdash;Servians, Bulgarians, Montenegrins&mdash;who
+ profess the Greek Orthodox faith, learn more easily the Russian language,
+ which is closely allied to their own, have no consciousness of belonging
+ to a Culturvolk, and in general possess a nature much more pliable than
+ the Teutonic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Government has recently attempted to accelerate the fusing process by
+ retracting the privileges granted to the colonists and abolishing the
+ peculiar administration under which they were placed. These measures&mdash;especially
+ the universal military service&mdash;may eventually diminish the extreme
+ exclusiveness of the Germans; the youths, whilst serving in the army, will
+ at least learn the Russian language, and may possibly imbibe something of
+ the Russian spirit. But for the present this new policy has aroused a
+ strong feeling of hostility and greatly intensified the spirit of
+ exclusiveness. In the German colonies I have often overheard complaints
+ about Russian tyranny and uncomplimentary remarks about the Russian
+ national character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mennonites consider themselves specially aggrieved by the so-called
+ reforms. They came to Russia in order to escape military service and with
+ the distinct understanding that they should be exempted from it, and now
+ they are forced to act contrary to the religious tenets of their sect.
+ This is the ground of complaint which they put forward in the petitions
+ addressed to the Government, but they have at the same time another, and
+ perhaps more important, objection to the proposed changes. They feel, as
+ several of them admitted to me, that if the barrier which separates them
+ from the rest of the population were in any way broken down, they could no
+ longer preserve that stern Puritanical discipline which at present
+ constitutes their force. Hence, though the Government was disposed to make
+ important concessions, hundreds of families sold their property and
+ emigrated to America. The movement, however, did not become general. At
+ present the Russian Mennonites number, male and female, about 50,000,
+ divided into 160 colonies and possessing over 800,000 acres of land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is quite possible that under the new system of administration the
+ colonists who profess in common with the Russians the Greek Orthodox faith
+ may be rapidly Russianised; but I am convinced that the others will long
+ resist assimilation. Greek orthodoxy and Protestant sectarianism are so
+ radically different in spirit that their respective votaries are not
+ likely to intermarry; and without intermarriage it is impossible that the
+ two nationalities should blend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As an instance of the ethnological curiosities which the traveller may
+ stumble upon unawares in this curious region, I may mention a strange
+ acquaintance I made when travelling on the great plain which stretches
+ from the Sea of Azof to the Caspian. One day I accidentally noticed on my
+ travelling-map the name "Shotlandskaya Koldniya" (Scottish Colony) near
+ the celebrated baths of Piatigorsk. I was at that moment in Stavropol, a
+ town about eighty miles to the north, and could not gain any satisfactory
+ information as to what this colony was. Some well-informed people assured
+ me that it really was what its name implied, whilst others asserted as
+ confidently that it was simply a small German settlement. To decide the
+ matter I determined to visit the place myself, though it did not lie near
+ my intended route, and I accordingly found myself one morning in the
+ village in question. The first inhabitants whom I encountered were
+ unmistakably German, and they professed to know nothing about the
+ existence of Scotsmen in the locality either at the present or in former
+ times. This was disappointing, and I was about to turn away and drive off,
+ when a young man, who proved to be the schoolmaster, came up, and on
+ hearing what I desired, advised me to consult an old Circassian who lived
+ at the end of the village and was well acquainted with local antiquities.
+ On proceeding to the house indicated, I found a venerable old man, with
+ fine, regular features of the Circassian type, coal-black sparkling eyes,
+ and a long grey beard that would have done honour to a patriarch. To him I
+ explained briefly, in Russian, the object of my visit, and asked whether
+ he knew of any Scotsmen in the district.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And why do you wish to know?" he replied, in the same language, fixing me
+ with his keen, sparkling eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because I am myself a Scotsman, and hoped to find fellow-countrymen
+ here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let the reader imagine my astonishment when, in reply to this, he
+ answered, in genuine broad Scotch, "Od, man, I'm a Scotsman tae! My name
+ is John Abercrombie. Did ye never hear tell o' John Abercrombie, the
+ famous Edinburgh doctor?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was fairly puzzled by this extraordinary declaration. Dr. Abercrombie's
+ name was familiar to me as that of a medical practitioner and writer on
+ psychology, but I knew that he was long since dead. When I had recovered a
+ little from my surprise, I ventured to remark to the enigmatical personage
+ before me that, though his tongue was certainly Scotch, his face was as
+ certainly Circassian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Weel, weel," he replied, evidently enjoying my look of mystification,
+ "you're no' far wrang. I'm a Circassian Scotsman!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This extraordinary admission did not diminish my perplexity, so I begged
+ my new acquaintance to be a little more explicit, and he at once complied
+ with my request. His long story may be told in a few words:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first years of the present century a band of Scotch missionaries
+ came to Russia for the purpose of converting the Circassian tribes, and
+ received from the Emperor Alexander I. a large grant of land in this
+ place, which was then on the frontier of the Empire. Here they founded a
+ mission, and began the work; but they soon discovered that the surrounding
+ population were not idolaters, but Mussulmans, and consequently impervious
+ to Christianity. In this difficulty they fell on the happy idea of buying
+ Circassian children from their parents and bringing them up as Christians.
+ One of these children, purchased about the year 1806, was a little boy
+ called Teoona. As he had been purchased with money subscribed by Dr.
+ Abercrombie, he had received in baptism that gentleman's name, and he
+ considered himself the foster-son of his benefactor. Here was the
+ explanation of the mystery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Teoona, alias Mr. Abercrombie, was a man of more than average
+ intelligence. Besides his native tongue, he spoke English, German, and
+ Russian perfectly; and he assured me that he knew several other languages
+ equally well. His life had been devoted to missionary work, and especially
+ to translating and printing the Scriptures. He had laboured first in
+ Astrakhan, then for four years and a half in Persia&mdash;in the service
+ of the Bale mission&mdash;and afterwards for six years in Siberia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Scottish mission was suppressed by the Emperor Nicholas about the year
+ 1835, and all the missionaries except two returned home. The son of one of
+ these two (Galloway) was the only genuine Scotsman remaining at the time
+ of my visit. Of the "Circassian Scotsmen" there were several, most of whom
+ had married Germans. The other inhabitants were German colonists from the
+ province of Saratof, and German was the language commonly spoken in the
+ village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After hearing so much about foreign colonists, Tartar invaders, and
+ Finnish aborigines, the reader may naturally desire to know the numerical
+ strength of this foreign element. Unfortunately we have no accurate data
+ on this subject, but from a careful examination of the available
+ statistics I am inclined to conclude that it constitutes about one-sixth
+ of the population of European Russia, including Poland, Finland, and the
+ Caucasus, and nearly a third of the population of the Empire as a whole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ AMONG THE HERETICS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The Molokanye&mdash;My Method of Investigation&mdash;Alexandrof-Hai&mdash;An
+ Unexpected Theological Discussion&mdash;Doctrines and Ecclesiastical
+ Organisation of the Molokanye&mdash;Moral Supervision and Mutual
+ Assistance&mdash;History of the Sect&mdash;A False Prophet&mdash;Utilitarian
+ Christianity&mdash;Classification of the Fantastic Sects&mdash;The
+ "Khlysti"&mdash;Policy of the Government towards Sectarianism&mdash;Two
+ Kinds of Heresy&mdash;Probable Future of the Heretical Sects&mdash;Political
+ Disaffection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst travelling on the Steppe I heard a great deal about a peculiar
+ religious sect called the Molokanye, and I felt interested in them because
+ their religious belief, whatever it was, seemed to have a beneficial
+ influence on their material welfare. Of the same race and placed in the
+ same conditions as the Orthodox peasantry around them, they were
+ undoubtedly better housed, better clad, more punctual in the payment of
+ their taxes, and, in a word, more prosperous. All my informants agreed in
+ describing them as quiet, decent, sober people; but regarding their
+ religious doctrines the evidence was vague and contradictory. Some
+ described them as Protestants or Lutherans, whilst others believed them to
+ be the last remnants of a curious heretical sect which existed in the
+ early Christian Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Desirous of obtaining clear notions on the subject, I determined to
+ investigate the matter for myself. At first I found this to be no easy
+ task. In the villages through which I passed I found numerous members of
+ the sect, but they all showed a decided repugnance to speak about their
+ religious beliefs. Long accustomed to extortion and persecution at the
+ hands of the Administration, and suspecting me to be a secret agent of the
+ Government, they carefully avoided speaking on any subject beyond the
+ state of the weather and the prospects of the harvest, and replied to my
+ questions on other topics as if they had been standing before a Grand
+ Inquisitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few unsuccessful attempts convinced me that it would be impossible to
+ extract from them their religious beliefs by direct questioning. I
+ adopted, therefore, a different system of tactics. From meagre replies
+ already received I had discovered that their doctrine had at least a
+ superficial resemblance to Presbyterianism, and from former experience I
+ was aware that the curiosity of intelligent Russian peasants is easily
+ excited by descriptions of foreign countries. On these two facts I based
+ my plan of campaign. When I found a Molokan, or some one whom I suspected
+ to be such, I talked for some time about the weather and the crops, as if
+ I had no ulterior object in view. Having fully discussed this matter, I
+ led the conversation gradually from the weather and crops in Russia to the
+ weather and crops in Scotland, and then passed slowly from Scotch
+ agriculture to the Scotch Presbyterian Church. On nearly every occasion
+ this policy succeeded. When the peasant heard that there was a country
+ where the people interpreted the Scriptures for themselves, had no
+ bishops, and considered the veneration of Icons as idolatry, he invariably
+ listened with profound attention; and when he learned further that in that
+ wonderful country the parishes annually sent deputies to an assembly in
+ which all matters pertaining to the Church were freely and publicly
+ discussed, he almost always gave free expression to his astonishment, and
+ I had to answer a whole volley of questions. "Where is that country?" "Is
+ it to the east, or the west?" "Is it very far away?" "If our Presbyter
+ could only hear all that!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This last expression was precisely what I wanted, because it gave me an
+ opportunity of making the acquaintance of the Presbyter, or pastor,
+ without seeming to desire it; and I knew that a conversation with that
+ personage, who is always an uneducated peasant like the others, but is
+ generally more intelligent and better acquainted with religious doctrine,
+ would certainly be of use to me. On more than one occasion I spent a great
+ part of the night with a Presbyter, and thereby learned much concerning
+ the religious beliefs and practices of the sect. After these interviews I
+ was sure to be treated with confidence and respect by all the Molokanye in
+ the village, and recommended to the brethren of the faith in the
+ neighbouring villages through which I intended to pass. Several of the
+ more intelligent peasants with whom I spoke advised me strongly to visit
+ Alexandrof-Hai, a village situated on the borders of the Kirghiz Steppe.
+ "We are dark [i.e., ignorant] people here," they were wont to say, "and do
+ not know anything, but in Alexandrof-Hai you will find those who know the
+ faith, and they will discuss with you." This prediction was fulfilled in a
+ somewhat unexpected way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When returning some weeks later from a visit to the Kirghiz of the Inner
+ Horde, I arrived one evening at this centre of the Molokan faith, and was
+ hospitably received by one of the brotherhood. In conversing casually with
+ my host on religious subjects I expressed to him a desire to find some one
+ well read in Holy Writ and well grounded in the faith, and he promised to
+ do what he could for me in this respect. Next morning he kept his promise
+ with a vengeance. Immediately after the tea-urn had been removed the door
+ of the room was opened and twelve peasants were ushered in! After the
+ customary salutations with these unexpected visitors, my host informed me
+ to my astonishment that his friends had come to have a talk with me about
+ the faith; and without further ceremony he placed before me a folio Bible
+ in the old Slavonic tongue, in order that I might read passages in support
+ of my arguments. As I was not at all prepared to open a formal theological
+ discussion, I felt not a little embarrassed, and I could see that my
+ travelling companions, two Russian friends who cared for none of these
+ things, were thoroughly enjoying my discomfiture. There was, however, no
+ possibility of drawing back. I had asked for an opportunity of having a
+ talk with some of the brethren, and now I had got it in a way that I
+ certainly did not expect. My friends withdrew&mdash;"leaving me to my
+ fate," as they whispered to me&mdash;and the "talk" began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My fate was by no means so terrible as had been anticipated, but at first
+ the situation was a little awkward. Neither party had any clear ideas as
+ to what the other desired, and my visitors expected that I was to begin
+ the proceedings. This expectation was quite natural and justifiable, for I
+ had inadvertently invited them to meet me, but I could not make a speech
+ to them, for the best of all reasons&mdash;that I did not know what to
+ say. If I told them my real aims, their suspicions would probably be
+ aroused. My usual stratagem of the weather and the crops was wholly
+ inapplicable. For a moment I thought of proposing that a psalm should be
+ sung as a means of breaking the ice, but I felt that this would give to
+ the meeting a solemnity which I wished to avoid. On the whole it seemed
+ best to begin at once a formal discussion. I told them, therefore, that I
+ had spoken with many of their brethren in various villages, and that I had
+ found what I considered grave errors of doctrine. I could not, for
+ instance, agree with them in their belief that it was unlawful to eat
+ pork. This was perhaps an abrupt way of entering on the subject, but it
+ furnished at least a locus standi&mdash;something to talk about&mdash;and
+ an animated discussion immediately ensued. My opponents first endeavoured
+ to prove their thesis from the New Testament, and when this argument broke
+ down they had recourse to the Pentateuch. From a particular article of the
+ ceremonial law we passed to the broader question as to how far the
+ ceremonial law is still binding, and from this to other points equally
+ important.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the logic of the peasants was not always unimpeachable, their knowledge
+ of the Scriptures left nothing to be desired. In support of their views
+ they quoted long passages from memory, and whenever I indicated vaguely
+ any text which I needed, they at once supplied it verbatim, so that the
+ big folio Bible served merely as an ornament. Three or four of them seemed
+ to know the whole of the New Testament by heart. The course of our
+ informal debate need not here be described; suffice it to say that, after
+ four hours of uninterrupted conversation, we agreed to differ on questions
+ of detail, and parted from each other without a trace of that ill-feeling
+ which religious discussion commonly engenders. Never have I met men more
+ honest and courteous in debate, more earnest in the search after truth,
+ more careless of dialectical triumphs, than these simple, uneducated
+ muzhiks. If at one or two points in the discussion a little undue warmth
+ was displayed, I must do my opponents the justice to say that they were
+ not the offending party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This long discussion, as well as numerous discussions which I had had
+ before and since have had with Molokanye in various parts of the country,
+ confirmed my first impression that their doctrines have a strong
+ resemblance to Presbyterianism. There is, however, an important
+ difference. Presbyterianism has an ecclesiastical organisation and a
+ written creed, and its doctrines have long since become clearly defined by
+ means of public discussion, polemical literature, and general assemblies.
+ The Molokanye, on the contrary, have had no means of developing their
+ fundamental principles and forming their vague religious beliefs into a
+ clearly defined logical system. Their theology is therefore still in a
+ half-fluid state, so that it is impossible to predict what form it will
+ ultimately assume. "We have not yet thought about that," I have frequently
+ been told when I inquired about some abstruse doctrine; "we must talk
+ about it at the meeting next Sunday. What is your opinion?" Besides this,
+ their fundamental principles allow great latitude for individual and local
+ differences of opinion. They hold that Holy Writ is the only rule of faith
+ and conduct, but that it must be taken in the spiritual, and not in the
+ literal, sense. As there is no terrestrial authority to which doubtful
+ points can be referred, each individual is free to adopt the
+ interpretation which commends itself to his own judgment. This will no
+ doubt ultimately lead to a variety of sects, and already there is a
+ considerable diversity of opinion between different communities; but this
+ diversity has not yet been recognised, and I may say that I nowhere found
+ that fanatically dogmatic, quibbling spirit which is usually the soul of
+ sectarianism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For their ecclesiastical organisation the Molokanye take as their model
+ the early Apostolic Church, as depicted in the New Testament, and
+ uncompromisingly reject all later authorities. In accordance with this
+ model they have no hierarchy and no paid clergy, but choose from among
+ themselves a Presbyter and two assistants&mdash;men well known among the
+ brethren for their exemplary life and their knowledge of the Scriptures&mdash;whose
+ duty it is to watch over the religious and moral welfare of the flock. On
+ Sundays they hold meetings in private houses&mdash;they are not allowed to
+ build churches&mdash;and spend two or three hours in psalm singing,
+ prayer, reading the Scriptures, and friendly conversation on religious
+ subjects. If any one has a doctrinal difficulty which he desires to have
+ cleared up, he states it to the congregation, and some of the others give
+ their opinions, with the texts on which the opinions are founded. If the
+ question seems clearly solved by the texts, it is decided; if not, it is
+ left open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As in many young sects, there exists among the Molokanye a system of
+ severe moral supervision. If a member has been guilty of drunkenness or
+ any act unbecoming a Christian, he is first admonished by the Presbyter in
+ private or before the congregation; and if this does not produce the
+ desired effect, he is excluded for a longer or shorter period from the
+ meetings and from all intercourse with the members. In extreme cases
+ expulsion is resorted to. On the other hand, if any one of the members
+ happens to be, from no fault of his own, in pecuniary difficulties, the
+ others will assist him. This system of mutual control and mutual
+ assistance has no doubt something to do with the fact that the Molokanye
+ are distinguished from the surrounding population by their sobriety,
+ uprightness, and material prosperity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the history of the sect my friends in Alexandrof-Hai could tell me very
+ little, but I have obtained from other quarters some interesting
+ information. The founder was a peasant of the province of Tambof called
+ Uklein, who lived in the reign of Catherine II., and gained his living as
+ an itinerant tailor. For some time he belonged to the sect of the
+ Dukhobortsi&mdash;who are sometimes called the Russian Quakers, and who
+ have recently become known in Western Europe through the efforts of Count
+ Tolstoy on their behalf&mdash;but he soon seceded from them, because he
+ could not admit their doctrine that God dwells in the human soul, and that
+ consequently the chief source of religious truth is internal
+ enlightenment. To him it seemed that religious truth was to be found only
+ in the Scriptures. With this doctrine he soon made many converts, and one
+ day he unexpectedly entered the town of Tambof, surrounded by seventy
+ "Apostles" chanting psalms. They were all quickly arrested and imprisoned,
+ and when the affair was reported to St. Petersburg the Empress Catherine
+ ordered that they should be handed over to the ecclesiastical authorities,
+ and that in the event of their proving obdurate to exhortation they should
+ be tried by the Criminal Courts. Uklein professed to recant, and was
+ liberated; but he continued his teaching secretly in the villages, and at
+ the time of his death he was believed to have no less than five thousand
+ followers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the actual strength of the sect it is difficult to form even a
+ conjecture. Certainly it has many thousand members&mdash;probably several
+ hundred thousand. Formerly the Government transported them from the
+ central provinces to the thinly populated outlying districts, where they
+ had less opportunity of contaminating Orthodox neighbours; and accordingly
+ we find them in the southeastern districts of Samara, on the north coast
+ of the Sea of Azof, in the Crimea, in the Caucasus, and in Siberia. There
+ are still, however, very many of them in the central region, especially in
+ the province of Tambof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The readiness with which the Molokanye modify their opinions and beliefs
+ in accordance with what seems to them new light saves them effectually
+ from bigotry and fanaticism, but it at the same time exposes them to evils
+ of a different kind, from which they might be preserved by a few stubborn
+ prejudices. "False prophets arise among us," said an old, sober-minded
+ member to me on one occasion, "and lead many away from the faith."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1835, for example, great excitement was produced among them by rumours
+ that the second advent of Christ was at hand, and that the Son of Man,
+ coming to judge the world, was about to appear in the New Jerusalem,
+ somewhere near Mount Ararat. As Elijah and Enoch were to appear before the
+ opening of the Millennium, they were anxiously awaited by the faithful,
+ and at last Elijah appeared, in the person of a Melitopol peasant called
+ Belozvorof, who announced that on a given day he would ascend into heaven.
+ On the day appointed a great crowd collected, but he failed to keep his
+ promise, and was handed over to the police as an impostor by the Molokanye
+ themselves. Unfortunately they were not always so sensible as on that
+ occasion. In the very next year many of them were persuaded by a certain
+ Lukian Petrof to put on their best garments and start for the Promised
+ Land in the Caucasus, where the Millennium was about to begin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of these false prophets the most remarkable in recent times was a man who
+ called himself Ivan Grigorief, a mysterious personage who had at one time
+ a Turkish and at another an American passport, but who seemed in all other
+ respects a genuine Russian. Some years previously to my visit he appeared
+ at Alexandrof-Hai. Though he professed himself to be a good Molokan and
+ was received as such, he enounced at the weekly meetings many new and
+ startling ideas. At first he simply urged his hearers to live like the
+ early Christians, and have all things in common. This seemed sound
+ doctrine to the Molokanye, who profess to take the early Christians as
+ their model, and some of them thought of at once abolishing personal
+ property; but when the teacher intimated pretty plainly that this
+ communism should include free love, a decided opposition arose, and it was
+ objected that the early Church did not recommend wholesale adultery and
+ cognate sins. This was a formidable objection, but "the prophet" was equal
+ to the occasion. He reminded his friends that in accordance with their own
+ doctrine the Scriptures should be understood, not in the literal, but in
+ the spiritual, sense&mdash;that Christianity had made men free, and every
+ true Christian ought to use his freedom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This account of the new doctrine was given to me by an intelligent
+ Molokan, who had formerly been a peasant and was now a trader, as I sat
+ one evening in his house in Novo-usensk, the chief town of the district in
+ which Alexandrof-Hai is situated. It seemed to me that the author of this
+ ingenious attempt to conciliate Christianity with extreme Utilitarianism
+ must be an educated man in disguise. This conviction I communicated to my
+ host, but he did not agree with me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I think not," he replied; "in fact, I am sure he is a peasant, and I
+ strongly suspect he was at some time a soldier. He has not much learning,
+ but he has a wonderful gift of talking; never have I heard any one speak
+ like him. He would have talked over the whole village, had it not been for
+ an old man who was more than a match for him. And then he went to
+ Orloff-Hai and there he did talk the people over." What he really did in
+ this latter place I never could clearly ascertain. Report said that he
+ founded a communistic association, of which he was himself president and
+ treasurer, and converted the members to an extraordinary theory of
+ prophetic succession, invented apparently for his own sensual
+ gratification. For further information my host advised me to apply either
+ to the prophet himself, who was at that time confined in the gaol on a
+ charge of using a forged passport, or to one of his friends, a certain Mr.
+ I&mdash;&mdash;, who lived in the town. As it was a difficult matter to
+ gain admittance to the prisoner, and I had little time at my disposal, I
+ adopted the latter alternative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. I&mdash;&mdash; was himself a somewhat curious character. He had been
+ a student in Moscow, and in consequence of some youthful indiscretions
+ during the University disturbances had been exiled to this place. After
+ waiting in vain some years for a release, he gave up the idea of entering
+ one of the learned professions, married a peasant girl, rented a piece of
+ land, bought a pair of camels, and settled down as a small farmer.* He had
+ a great deal to tell about the prophet.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Here for the first time I saw camels used for agricultural
+ purposes. When yoked to a small four-wheeled cart, the
+ "ships of the desert" seemed decidedly out of place.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Grigorief, it seemed, was really simply a Russian peasant, but he had been
+ from his youth upwards one of those restless people who can never long
+ work in harness. Where his native place was, and why he left it, he never
+ divulged, for reasons best known to himself. He had travelled much, and
+ had been an attentive observer. Whether he had ever been in America was
+ doubtful, but he had certainly been in Turkey, and had fraternised with
+ various Russian sectarians, who are to be found in considerable numbers
+ near the Danube. Here, probably, he acquired many of his peculiar
+ religious ideas, and conceived his grand scheme of founding a new religion&mdash;of
+ rivalling the Founder of Christianity! He aimed at nothing less than this,
+ as he on one occasion confessed, and he did not see why he should not be
+ successful. He believed that the Founder of Christianity had been simply a
+ man like himself, who understood better than others the people around him
+ and the circumstances of the time, and he was convinced that he himself
+ had these qualifications. One qualification, however, for becoming a
+ prophet he certainly did not possess: he had no genuine religious
+ enthusiasm in him&mdash;nothing of the martyr spirit about him. Much of
+ his own preaching he did not himself believe, and he had a secret contempt
+ for those who naively accepted it all. Not only was he cunning, but he
+ knew he was cunning, and he was conscious that he was playing an assumed
+ part. And yet perhaps it would be unjust to say that he was merely an
+ impostor exclusively occupied with his own personal advantage. Though he
+ was naturally a man of sensual tastes, and could not resist convenient
+ opportunities of gratifying them, he seemed to believe that his
+ communistic schemes would, if realised, be beneficial not only to himself,
+ but also to the people. Altogether a curious mixture of the prophet, the
+ social reformer, and the cunning impostor!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the Molokanye, there are in Russia many other heretical sects.
+ Some of them are simply Evangelical Protestants, like the Stundisti, who
+ have adopted the religious conceptions of their neighbours, the German
+ colonists; whilst others are composed of wild enthusiasts, who give a
+ loose rein to their excited imagination, and revel in what the Germans
+ aptly term "der hohere Blodsinn." I cannot here attempt to convey even a
+ general idea of these fantastic sects with their doctrinal and ceremonial
+ absurdities, but I may offer the following classification of them for the
+ benefit of those who may desire to study the subject:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Sects which take the Scriptures as the basis of their belief, but
+ interpret and complete the doctrines therein contained by means of the
+ occasional inspiration or internal enlightenment of their leading members.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Sects which reject interpretation and insist on certain passages of
+ Scripture being taken in the literal sense. In one of the best known of
+ these sects&mdash;the Skoptsi, or Eunuchs&mdash;fanaticism has led to
+ physical mutilation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Sects which pay little or no attention to Scripture, and derive their
+ doctrine from the supposed inspiration of their living teachers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Sects which believe in the re-incarnation of Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Sects which confound religion with nervous excitement, and are more or
+ less erotic in their character. The excitement necessary for prophesying
+ is commonly produced by dancing, jumping, pirouetting, or
+ self-castigation; and the absurdities spoken at such times are regarded as
+ the direct expression of divine wisdom. The religious exercises resemble
+ more or less closely those of the "dancing dervishes" and "howling
+ dervishes's" with which all who have visited Constantinople are familiar.
+ There is, however, one important difference: the dervishes practice their
+ religious exercises in public, and consequently observe a certain decorum,
+ whilst these Russian sects assemble in secret, and give free scope to
+ their excitement, so that most disgusting orgies sometimes take place at
+ their meetings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To illustrate the general character of the sects belonging to this last
+ category, I may quote here a short extract from a description of the
+ "Khlysti" by one who was initiated into their mysteries: "Among them men
+ and women alike take upon themselves the calling of teachers and prophets,
+ and in this character they lead a strict, ascetic life, refrain from the
+ most ordinary and innocent pleasures, exhaust themselves by long fasting
+ and wild, ecstatic religious exercises, and abhor marriage. Under the
+ excitement caused by their supposed holiness and inspiration, they call
+ themselves not only teachers and prophets, but also 'Saviours,'
+ 'Redeemers,' 'Christs,' 'Mothers of God.' Generally speaking, they call
+ themselves simply Gods, and pray to each other as to real Gods and living
+ Christs or Madonnas. When several of these teachers come together at a
+ meeting, they dispute with each other in a vain boasting way as to which
+ of them possesses most grace and power. In this rivalry they sometimes
+ give each other lusty blows on the ear, and he who bears the blows most
+ patiently, turning the other cheek to the smiter, acquires the reputation
+ of having most holiness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another sect belonging to this category is the Jumpers, among whom the
+ erotic element is disagreeably prominent. Here is a description of their
+ religious meetings, which are held during summer in the forest, and during
+ winter in some out-house or barn: "After due preparation prayers are read
+ by the chief teacher, dressed in a white robe and standing in the midst of
+ the congregation. At first he reads in an ordinary tone of voice, and then
+ passes gradually into a merry chant. When he remarks that the chanting has
+ sufficiently acted on the hearers, he begins to jump. The hearers, singing
+ likewise, follow his example. Their ever-increasing excitement finds
+ expression in the highest possible jumps. This they continue as long as
+ they can&mdash;men and women alike yelling like enraged savages. When all
+ are thoroughly exhausted, the leader declares that he hears the angels
+ singing"&mdash;and then begins a scene which cannot be here described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is but fair to add that we know very little of these peculiar sects,
+ and what we do know is furnished by avowed enemies. It is very possible,
+ therefore, that some of them are not nearly so absurd as they are commonly
+ represented, and that many of the stories told are mere calumnies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Government is very hostile to sectarianism, and occasionally
+ endeavours to suppress it. This is natural enough as regards these
+ fantastic sects, but it seems strange that the peaceful, industrious,
+ honest Molokanye and Stundisti should be put under the ban. Why is it that
+ a Russian peasant should be punished for holding doctrines which are
+ openly professed, with the sanction of the authorities, by his neighbours,
+ the German colonists?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To understand this the reader must know that according to Russian
+ conceptions there are two distinct kinds of heresy, distinguished from
+ each other, not by the doctrines held, but by the nationality of the
+ holder, it seems to a Russian in the nature of things that Tartars should
+ be Mahometans, that Poles should be Roman Catholics, and that Germans
+ should be Protestants; and the mere act of becoming a Russian subject is
+ not supposed to lay the Tartar, the Pole, or the German under any
+ obligation to change his faith. These nationalities are therefore allowed
+ the most perfect freedom in the exercise of their respective religions, so
+ long as they refrain from disturbing by propagandism the divinely
+ established order of things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the received theory, and we must do the Russians the justice to
+ say that they habitually act up to it. If the Government has sometimes
+ attempted to convert alien races, the motive has always been political,
+ and the efforts have never awakened much sympathy among the people at
+ large, or even among the clergy. In like manner the missionary societies
+ which have sometimes been formed in imitation of the Western nations have
+ never received much popular support. Thus with regard to aliens this
+ peculiar theory has led to very extensive religious toleration. With
+ regard to the Russians themselves the theory has had a very different
+ effect. If in the nature of things the Tartar is a Mahometan, the Pole a
+ Roman Catholic, and the German a Protestant, it is equally in the nature
+ of things that the Russian should be a member of the Orthodox Church. On
+ this point the written law and public opinion are in perfect accord. If an
+ Orthodox Russian becomes a Roman Catholic or a Protestant, he is amenable
+ to the criminal law, and is at the same time condemned by public opinion
+ as an apostate and renegade&mdash;almost as a traitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the future of these heretical sects it is impossible to speak with
+ confidence. The more gross and fantastic will probably disappear as
+ primary education spreads among the people; but the Protestant sects seem
+ to possess much more vitality. For the present, at least, they are rapidly
+ spreading. I have seen large villages where, according to the testimony of
+ the inhabitants, there was not a single heretic fifteen years before, and
+ where one-half of the population had already become Molokanye; and this
+ change, be it remarked, had taken place without any propagandist
+ organisation. The civil and ecclesiastical authorities were well aware of
+ the existence of the movement, but they were powerless to prevent it. The
+ few efforts which they made were without effect, or worse than useless.
+ Among the Stundisti corporal punishment was tried as an antidote&mdash;without
+ the concurrence, it is to be hoped, of the central authorities&mdash;and
+ to the Molokanye of the province of Samara a learned monk was sent in the
+ hope of converting them from their errors by reason and eloquence. What
+ effect the birch-twigs had on the religious convictions of the Stundisti I
+ have not been able to ascertain, but I assume that they were not very
+ efficacious, for according to the latest accounts the numbers of the sect
+ are increasing. Of the mission in the province of Samara I happen to know
+ more, and can state on the evidence of many peasants&mdash;some of them
+ Orthodox&mdash;that the only immediate effect was to stir up religious
+ fanaticism, and to induce a certain number of Orthodox to go over to the
+ heretical camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In their public discussions the disputants could find no common ground on
+ which to argue, for the simple reason that their fundamental conceptions
+ were different. The monk spoke of the Church as the terrestrial
+ representative of Christ and the sole possessor of truth, whilst his
+ opponents knew nothing of a Church in this sense, and held simply that all
+ men should live in accordance with the dictates of Scripture. Once the
+ monk consented to argue with them on their own ground, and on that
+ occasion he sustained a signal defeat, for he could not produce a single
+ passage recommending the veneration of Icons&mdash;a practice which the
+ Russian peasants consider an essential part of Orthodoxy. After this he
+ always insisted on the authority of the early Ecumenical Councils and the
+ Fathers of the Church&mdash;an authority which his antagonists did not
+ recognise. Altogether the mission was a complete failure, and all parties
+ regretted that it had been undertaken. "It was a great mistake," remarked
+ to me confidentially an Orthodox peasant; "a very great mistake. The
+ Molokanye are a cunning people. The monk was no match for them; they knew
+ the Scriptures a great deal better than he did. The Church should not
+ condescend to discuss with heretics."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is often said that these heretical sects are politically disaffected,
+ and the Molokanye are thought to be specially dangerous in this respect.
+ Perhaps there is a certain foundation for this opinion, for men are
+ naturally disposed to doubt the legitimacy of a power that systematically
+ persecutes them. With regard to the Molokanye, I believe the accusation to
+ be a groundless calumny. Political ideas seemed entirely foreign to their
+ modes of thought. During my intercourse with them I often heard them refer
+ to the police as "wolves which have to be fed," but I never heard them
+ speak of the Emperor otherwise than in terms of filial affection and
+ veneration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE DISSENTERS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Dissenters not to be Confounded with Heretics&mdash;Extreme Importance
+ Attached to Ritual Observances&mdash;The Raskol, or Great Schism in the
+ Seventeenth Century&mdash;Antichrist Appears!&mdash;Policy of Peter the
+ Great and Catherine II.&mdash;Present Ingenious Method of Securing
+ Religious Toleration&mdash;Internal Development of the Raskol&mdash;Schism
+ among the Schismatics&mdash;The Old Ritualists&mdash;The Priestless People&mdash;Cooling
+ of the Fanatical Enthusiasm and Formation of New Sects&mdash;Recent Policy
+ of the Government towards the Sectarians&mdash;Numerical Force and
+ Political Significance of Sectarianism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must be careful not to confound those heretical sects, Protestant and
+ fantastical, of which I have spoken in the preceding chapter, with the
+ more numerous Dissenters or Schismatics, the descendants of those who
+ seceded from the Russian Church&mdash;or more correctly from whom the
+ Russian Church seceded&mdash;in the seventeenth century. So far from
+ regarding themselves as heretics, these latter consider themselves more
+ orthodox than the official Orthodox Church. They are conservatives, too,
+ in the social as well as the religious sense of the term. Among them are
+ to be found the last remnants of old Russian life, untinged by foreign
+ influences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russian Church, as I have already had occasion to remark, has always
+ paid inordinate attention to ceremonial observances and somewhat neglected
+ the doctrinal and moral elements of the faith which it professes. This
+ peculiarity greatly facilitated the spread of its influence among a people
+ accustomed to pagan rites and magical incantations, but it had the
+ pernicious effect of confirming in the new converts their superstitious
+ belief in the virtue of mere ceremonies. Thus the Russians became zealous
+ Christians in all matters of external observance, without knowing much
+ about the spiritual meaning of the rites which they practised. They looked
+ upon the rites and sacraments as mysterious charms which preserved them
+ from evil influences in the present life and secured them eternal felicity
+ in the life to come, and they believed that these charms would inevitably
+ lose their efficacy if modified in the slightest degree. Extreme
+ importance was therefore attached to the ritual minutiae, and the
+ slightest modification of these minutiae assumed the importance of an
+ historical event. In the year 1476, for instance, the Novgorodian
+ Chronicler gravely relates:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This winter some philosophers (!) began to sing, 'O Lord, have mercy,'
+ and others merely, 'Lord, have mercy.'" And this attaching of enormous
+ importance to trifles was not confined to the ignorant multitude. An
+ Archbishop of Novgorod declared solemnly that those who repeat the word
+ "Alleluia" only twice at certain points in the liturgy "sing to their own
+ damnation," and a celebrated Ecclesiastical Council, held in 1551, put
+ such matters as the position of the fingers when making the sign of the
+ cross on the same level as heresies&mdash;formally anathematising those
+ who acted in such trifles contrary to its decisions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This conservative spirit in religious concerns had a considerable
+ influence on social life. As there was no clear line of demarcation
+ between religious observances and simple traditional customs, the most
+ ordinary act might receive a religious significance, and the slightest
+ departure from a traditional custom might be looked upon as a deadly sin.
+ A Russian of the olden time would have resisted the attempt to deprive him
+ of his beard as strenuously as a Calvinist of the present day would resist
+ the attempt to make him abjure the doctrine of Predestination&mdash;and
+ both for the same reason. As the doctrine of Predestination is for the
+ Calvinist, so the wearing of a beard was for the old Russian&mdash;an
+ essential of salvation. "Where," asked one of the Patriarchs of Moscow,
+ "will those who shave their chins stand at the Last Day?&mdash;among the
+ righteous adorned with beards, or among the beardless heretics?" The
+ question required no answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the seventeenth century this superstitious, conservative spirit reached
+ its climax. The civil wars and foreign invasions, accompanied by pillage,
+ famine, and plagues with which that century opened, produced a wide-spread
+ conviction that the end of all things was at hand. The mysterious number
+ of the Beast was found to indicate the year 1666, and timid souls began to
+ discover signs of that falling away from the Faith which is spoken of in
+ the Apocalypse. The majority of the people did not perhaps share this
+ notion, but they believed that the sufferings with which they had been
+ visited were a Divine punishment for having forsaken the ancient customs.
+ And it could not be denied that considerable changes had taken place.
+ Orthodox Russia was now tainted with the presence of heretics. Foreigners
+ who shaved their chins and smoked the accursed weed had been allowed to
+ settle in Moscow, and the Tsars not only held converse with them, but had
+ even adopted some of their "pagan" practises. Besides this, the Government
+ had introduced innovations and reforms, many of which were displeasing to
+ the people. In short, the country was polluted with "heresy"&mdash;a
+ subtle, evil influence lurking in everything foreign, and very dangerous
+ to the spiritual and temporal welfare of the Faithful&mdash;something of
+ the nature of an epidemic, but infinitely more dangerous; for disease
+ kills merely the body, whereas "heresy" kills the soul, and causes both
+ soul and body to be cast into hell-fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had the Government introduced the innovations slowly and cautiously,
+ respecting as far as possible all outward forms, it might have effected
+ much without producing a religious panic; but, instead of acting
+ circumspectly as the occasion demanded, it ran full-tilt against the
+ ancient prejudices and superstitious fears, and drove the people into open
+ resistance. When the art of printing was introduced, it became necessary
+ to choose the best texts of the Liturgy, Psalter, and other religious
+ books, and on examination it was found that, through the ignorance and
+ carelessness of copyists, numerous errors had crept into the manuscripts
+ in use. This discovery led to further investigation, which showed that
+ certain irregularities had likewise crept into the ceremonial. The chief
+ of the clerical errors lay in the orthography of the word "Jesus," and the
+ chief irregularity in the ceremonial regarded the position of the fingers
+ when making the sign of the cross.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To correct these errors the celebrated Nikon, who was Patriarch in the
+ time of Tsar Alexis, father of Peter the Great, ordered all the old
+ liturgical books and the old Icons to be called in, and new ones to be
+ distributed; but the clergy and the people resisted. Believing these
+ "Nikonian novelties" to be heretical, they clung to their old Icons, their
+ old missals and their old religious customs as the sole anchors of safety
+ which could save the Faithful from drifting to perdition. In vain the
+ Patriarch assured the people that the change was a return to the ancient
+ forms still preserved in Greece and Constantinople. "The Greek Church," it
+ was replied, "is no longer free from heresy. Orthodoxy has become
+ many-coloured from the violence of the Turkish Mahomet; and the Greeks,
+ under the sons of Hagar, have fallen away from the ancient traditions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An anathema, formally pronounced by an Ecclesiastical Council against
+ these Nonconformists, had no more effect than the admonitions of the
+ Patriarch. They persevered in their obstinacy, and refused to believe that
+ the blessed saints and holy martyrs who had used the ancient forms had not
+ prayed and crossed themselves aright. "Not those holy men of old, but the
+ present Patriarch and his counsellors must be heretics." "Woe to us! Woe
+ to us!" cried the monks of Solovetsk when they received the new Liturgies.
+ "What have you done with the Son of God? Give him back to us! You have
+ changed Isus [the old Russian form of Jesus] into Iisus! It is fearful not
+ only to commit such a sin, but even to think of it!" And the sturdy monks
+ shut their gates, and defied Patriarch, Council, and Tsar for seven long
+ years, till the monastery was taken by an armed force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The decree of excommunication pronounced by the Ecclesiastical Council
+ placed the Nonconformists beyond the pale of the Church, and the civil
+ power undertook the task of persecuting them. Persecution had of course
+ merely the effect of confirming the victims in their belief that the
+ Church and the Tsar had become heretical. Thousands fled across the
+ frontier and settled in the neighbouring countries&mdash;Poland, Russia,
+ Sweden, Austria, Turkey, the Caucasus, and Siberia. Others concealed
+ themselves in the northern forests and the densely wooded region near the
+ Polish frontier, where they lived by agriculture or fishing, and prayed,
+ crossed themselves and buried their dead according to the customs of their
+ forefathers. The northern forests were their favourite place of refuge.
+ Hither flocked many of those who wished to keep themselves pure and
+ undefiled. Here the more learned men among the Nonconformists&mdash;well
+ acquainted with Holy Writ, with fragmentary translations from the Greek
+ Fathers, and with the more important decisions of the early Ecumenical
+ Councils&mdash;wrote polemical and edifying works for the confounding of
+ heretics and the confirming of true believers. Hence were sent out in all
+ directions zealous missionaries, in the guise of traders, peddlers, and
+ labourers, to sow what they called the living seed, and what the official
+ Church termed "Satan's tares." When the Government agents discovered these
+ retreats, the inmates generally fled from the "ravenous wolves"; but on
+ more than one occasion a large number of fanatical men and women, shutting
+ themselves up, set fire to their houses, and voluntarily perished in the
+ flames. In Paleostrofski Monastery, for instance, in the year 1687, no
+ less than 2,700 fanatics gained the crown of martyrdom in this way; and
+ many similar instances are on record.* As in all periods of religious
+ panic, the Apocalypse was carefully studied, and the Millennial ideas
+ rapidly spread. The signs of the time were plain: Satan was being let
+ loose for a little season. Men anxiously looked for the reappearance of
+ Antichrist&mdash;and Antichrist appeared!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * A list of well-authenticated cases is given by Nilski,
+ "Semeinaya zhizn v russkom Raskole," St. Petersburg, 1869;
+ part I., pp. 55-57. The number of these self-immolators
+ certainly amounted to many thousands.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The man in whom the people recognised the incarnate spirit of evil was no
+ other than Peter the Great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the Nonconformist point of view, Peter had very strong claims to be
+ considered Antichrist. He had none of the staid, pious demeanour of the
+ old Tsars, and showed no respect for many things which were venerated by
+ the people. He ate, drank, and habitually associated with heretics, spoke
+ their language, wore their costume, chose from among them his most
+ intimate friends, and favoured them more than his own people. Imagine the
+ horror and commotion which would be produced among pious Catholics if the
+ Pope should some day appear in the costume of the Grand Turk, and should
+ choose Pashas as his chief counsellors! The horror which Peter's conduct
+ produced among a large section of his subjects was not less great. They
+ could not explain it otherwise than by supposing him to be the Devil in
+ disguise, and they saw in all his important measures convincing proofs of
+ his Satanic origin. The newly invented census, or "revision," was a
+ profane "numbering of the people," and an attempt to enrol in the service
+ of Beëlzebub those whose names were written in the Lamb's Book of Life.
+ The new title of Imperator was explained to mean something very
+ diabolical. The passport bearing the Imperial arms was the seal of
+ Antichrist. The order to shave the beard was an attempt to disfigure "the
+ image of God," after which man had been created, and by which Christ would
+ recognise His own at the Last Day. The change in the calendar, by which
+ New Year's Day was transferred from September to January, was the
+ destruction of "the years of our Lord," and the introduction of the years
+ of Satan in their place. Of the ingenious arguments by which these theses
+ were supported, I may quote one by way of illustration. The world, it was
+ explained, could not have been created in January as the new calendar
+ seemed to indicate, because apples are not ripe at that season, and
+ consequently Eve could not have been tempted in the way described!*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * I found this ingenious argument in one of the polemical
+ treatises of the Old Believers.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ These ideas regarding Peter and his reforms were strongly confirmed by the
+ vigorous persecutions which took place during the earlier years of his
+ reign. The Nonconformists were constantly convicted of political
+ disaffection&mdash;especially of "insulting the Imperial Majesty"&mdash;and
+ were accordingly flogged, tortured, and beheaded without mercy. But when
+ Peter had succeeded in putting down all armed opposition, and found that
+ the movement was no longer dangerous for the throne, he adopted a policy
+ more in accordance with his personal character. Whether he had himself any
+ religious belief whatever may be doubted; certainly he had not a spark of
+ religious fanaticism in his nature. Exclusively occupied with secular
+ concerns, he took no interest in subtle questions of religious ceremonial,
+ and was profoundly indifferent as to how his subjects prayed and crossed
+ themselves, provided they obeyed his orders in worldly matters and paid
+ their taxes regularly. As soon, therefore, as political considerations
+ admitted of clemency, he stopped the persecutions, and at last, in 1714,
+ issued ukazes to the effect that all Dissenters might live unmolested,
+ provided they inscribed themselves in the official registers and paid a
+ double poll-tax. Somewhat later they were allowed to practise freely all
+ their old rites and customs, on condition of paying certain fines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the accession of Catherine II., "the friend of philosophers," the
+ Raskol,* as the schism had come to be called, entered on a new phase.
+ Penetrated with the ideas of religious toleration then in fashion in
+ Western Europe, Catherine abolished the disabilities to which the
+ Raskolniks were subjected, and invited those of them who had fled across
+ the frontier to return to their homes. Thousands accepted the invitation,
+ and many who had hitherto sought to conceal themselves from the eyes of
+ the authorities became rich and respected merchants. The peculiar
+ semi-monastic religious communities, which had up till that time existed
+ only in the forests of the northern and western provinces, began to appear
+ in Moscow, and were officially recognised by the Administration. At first
+ they took the form of hospitals for the sick, or asylums for the aged and
+ infirm, but soon they became regular monasteries, the superiors of which
+ exercised an undefined spiritual authority not only over the inmates, but
+ also over the members of the sect throughout the length and breadth of the
+ Empire.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The term is derived from two Russian words&mdash;ras, asunder;
+ and kolot, to split. Those who belong to the Raskol are
+ called Raskolniki. They call themselves Staro-obriadtsi
+ (Old Ritualists) or Staroveri (Old Believers).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ From that time down to the present the Government has followed a wavering
+ policy, oscillating between complete tolerance and active persecution. It
+ must, however, be said that the persecution has never been of a very
+ searching kind. In persecution, as in all other manifestations, the
+ Russian Church directs its attention chiefly to external forms. It does
+ not seek to ferret out heresy in a man's opinions, but complacently
+ accepts as Orthodox all who annually appear at confession and communion,
+ and who refrain from acts of open hostility. Those who can make these
+ concessions to convenience are practically free from molestation, and
+ those who cannot so trifle with their conscience have an equally
+ convenient method of escaping persecution. The parish clergy, with their
+ customary indifference to things spiritual and their traditional habit of
+ regarding their functions from the financial point of view, are hostile to
+ sectarianism chiefly because it diminishes their revenues by diminishing
+ the number of parishioners requiring their ministrations. This cause of
+ hostility can easily be removed by a certain pecuniary sacrifice on the
+ part of the sectarians, and accordingly there generally exists between
+ them and their parish priest a tacit contract, by which both parties are
+ perfectly satisfied. The priest receives his income as if all his
+ parishioners belonged to the State Church, and the parishioners are left
+ in peace to believe and practise what they please. By this rude,
+ convenient method a very large amount of toleration is effectually
+ secured. Whether the practise has a beneficial moral influence on the
+ parish clergy is, of course, an entirely different question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the priest has been satisfied, there still remains the police, which
+ likewise levies an irregular tax on heterodoxy; but the negotiations are
+ generally not difficult, for it is in the interest of both parties that
+ they should come to terms and live in good-fellowship. Thus practically
+ the Raskolniki live in the same condition as in the time of Peter: they
+ pay a tax and are not molested&mdash;only the money paid does not now find
+ its way into the Imperial Exchequer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These external changes in the history of the Raskol have exercised a
+ powerful influence on its internal development.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When formally anathematised and excluded from the dominant Church the
+ Nonconformists had neither a definite organisation nor a positive creed.
+ The only tie that bound them together was hostility to the "Nikonian
+ novelties," and all they desired was to preserve intact the beliefs and
+ customs of their forefathers. At first they never thought of creating any
+ permanent organisation. The more moderate believed that the Tsar would
+ soon re-establish Orthodoxy, and the more fanatical imagined that the end
+ of all things was at hand.* In either case they had only to suffer for a
+ little season, keeping themselves free from the taint of heresy and from
+ all contact with the kingdom of Antichrist.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Some had coffins made, and lay down in them at night, in
+ the expectation that the Second Advent might take place
+ before the morning.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But years passed, and neither of these expectations was fulfilled. The
+ fanatics awaited in vain the sound of the last trump and the appearance of
+ Christ, coming with His angels to judge the world. The sun continued to
+ rise, and the seasons followed each other in their accustomed course, but
+ the end was not yet. Nor did the civil power return to the old faith.
+ Nikon fell a victim to Court intrigues and his own overweening pride, and
+ was formally deposed. Tsar Alexis in the fulness of time was gathered unto
+ his fathers. But there was no sign of a re-establishment of the old
+ Orthodoxy. Gradually the leading Raskolniki perceived that they must make
+ preparations, not for the Day of Judgment, but for a terrestrial future&mdash;that
+ they must create some permanent form of ecclesiastical organisation. In
+ this work they encountered at the very outset not only practical, but also
+ theoretical difficulties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So long as they confined themselves simply to resisting the official
+ innovations, they seemed to be unanimous; but when they were forced to
+ abandon this negative policy and to determine theoretically their new
+ position, radical differences of opinion became apparent. All were
+ convinced that the official Russian Church had become heretical, and that
+ it had now Antichrist instead of Christ as its head; but it was not easy
+ to determine what should be done by those who refused to bow the knee to
+ the Son of Destruction. According to Protestant conceptions there was a
+ very simple solution of the difficulty: the Nonconformists had simply to
+ create a new Church for themselves, and worship God in the way that seemed
+ good to them. But to the Russians of that time such notions were still
+ more repulsive than the innovations of Nikon. These men were Orthodox to
+ the backbone&mdash;"plus royalistes que le roi"&mdash;and according to
+ Orthodox conceptions the founding of a new Church is an absurdity. They
+ believed that if the chain of historic continuity were once broken, the
+ Church must necessarily cease to exist, in the same way as an ancient
+ family becomes extinct when its sole representative dies without issue.
+ If, therefore, the Church had already ceased to exist, there was no longer
+ any means of communication between Christ and His people, the sacraments
+ were no longer efficacious, and mankind was forever deprived of the
+ ordinary means of grace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, on this important point there was a difference of opinion among the
+ Dissenters. Some of them believed that, though the ecclesiastical
+ authorities had become heretical, the Church still existed in the
+ communion of those who had refused to accept the innovations. Others
+ declared boldly that the Orthodox Church had ceased to exist, that the
+ ancient means of grace had been withdrawn, and that those who had remained
+ faithful must thenceforth seek salvation, not in the sacraments, but in
+ prayer and such other religious exercises as did not require the
+ co-operation of duly consecrated priests. Thus took place a schism among
+ the Schismatics. The one party retained all the sacraments and ceremonial
+ observances in the older form; the other refrained from the sacraments and
+ from many of the ordinary rites, on the ground that there was no longer a
+ real priesthood, and that consequently the sacraments could not be
+ efficacious. The former party are termed Staro-obriadsti, or Old
+ Ritualists; the latter are called Bezpopoftsi&mdash;that is to say, people
+ "without priests" (bez popov).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The succeeding history of these two sections of the Nonconformists has
+ been widely different. The Old Ritualists, being simply ecclesiastical
+ Conservatives desirous of resisting all innovations, have remained a
+ compact body little troubled by differences of opinion. The Priestless
+ People, on the contrary, ever seeking to discover some new effectual means
+ of salvation, have fallen into an endless number of independent sects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Old Ritualists had still, however, one important theoretical
+ difficulty. At first they had amongst themselves plenty of consecrated
+ priests for the celebration of the ordinances, but they had no means of
+ renewing the supply. They had no bishops, and according to Orthodox belief
+ the lower degrees of the clergy cannot be created without episcopal
+ consecration. At the time of the schism one bishop had thrown in his lot
+ with the Schismatics, but he had died shortly afterwards without leaving a
+ successor, and thereafter no bishop had joined their ranks. As time wore
+ on, the necessity of episcopal consecration came to be more and more felt,
+ and it is not a little interesting to observe how these rigorists, who
+ held to the letter of the law and declared themselves ready to die for a
+ jot or a tittle, modified their theory in accordance with the changing
+ exigencies of their position. When the priests who had kept themselves
+ "pure and undefiled"&mdash;free from all contact with Antichrist&mdash;became
+ scarce, it was discovered that certain priests of the dominant Church
+ might be accepted if they formally abjured the Nikonian novelties. At
+ first, however, only those who had been consecrated previous to the
+ supposed apostasy of the Church were accepted, for the very good reason
+ that consecration by bishops who had become heretical could not be
+ efficacious. When these could no longer be obtained it was discovered that
+ those who had been baptised previous to the apostasy might be accepted;
+ and when even these could no longer be found, a still further concession
+ was made to necessity, and all consecrated priests were received on
+ condition of their solemnly abjuring their errors. Of such priests there
+ was always an abundant supply. If a regular priest could not find a
+ parish, or if he was deposed by the authorities for some crime or
+ misdemeanour, he had merely to pass over to the Old Ritualists, and was
+ sure to find among them a hearty welcome and a tolerable salary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By these concessions the indefinite prolongation of Old Ritualism was
+ secured, but many of the Old Ritualists could not but feel that their
+ position was, to say the least, extremely anomalous. They had no bishops
+ of their own, and their priests were all consecrated by bishops whom they
+ believed to be heretical! For many years they hoped to escape from this
+ dilemma by discovering "Orthodox"&mdash;that is to say, Old Ritualist&mdash;bishops
+ somewhere in the East; but when the East had been searched in vain, and
+ all their efforts to obtain native bishops proved fruitless, they
+ conceived the design of creating a bishopric somewhere beyond the
+ frontier, among the Old Ritualists who had in times of persecution fled to
+ Prussia, Austria, and Turkey. There were, however, immense difficulties in
+ the way. In the first place it was necessary to obtain the formal
+ permission of some foreign Government; and in the second place an Orthodox
+ bishop must be found, willing to consecrate an Old Ritualist or to become
+ an Old Ritualist himself. Again and again the attempt was made, and
+ failed; but at last, after years of effort and intrigue, the design was
+ realised. In 1844 the Austrian Government gave permission to found a
+ bishopric at Belaya Krinitsa, in Galicia, a few miles from the Russian
+ frontier; and two years later the deposed Metropolitan of Bosnia
+ consented, after much hesitation, to pass over to the Old Ritualist
+ confession and accept the diocese.* From that time the Old Ritualists have
+ had their own bishops, and have not been obliged to accept the runaway
+ priests of the official Church.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * An interesting account of these negotiations, and a most
+ curious picture of the Orthodox ecclesiastical world in
+ Constantinople, is given by Subbotiny, "Istoria
+ Belokrinitskoi Ierarkhii," Moscow, 1874.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Old Ritualists were naturally much grieved by the schism, and were
+ often sorely tried by persecution, but they have always enjoyed a certain
+ spiritual tranquillity, proceeding from the conviction that they have
+ preserved for themselves the means of salvation. The position of the more
+ extreme section of the Schismatics was much more tragical. They believed
+ that the sacraments had irretrievably lost their efficacy, that the
+ ordinary means of salvation were forever withdrawn, that the powers of
+ darkness had been let loose for a little season, that the authorities were
+ the agents of Satan, and that the personage who filled the place of the
+ old God-fearing Tsars was no other than Antichrist. Under the influence of
+ these horrible ideas they fled to the woods and the caves to escape from
+ the rage of the Beast, and to await the second coming of Our Lord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This state of things could not continue permanently. Extreme religious
+ fanaticism, like all other abnormal states, cannot long exist in a mass of
+ human beings without some constant exciting cause. The vulgar necessities
+ of everyday life, especially among people who have to live by the labour
+ of their hands, have a wonderfully sobering influence on the excited
+ brain, and must always, sooner or later, prove fatal to inordinate
+ excitement. A few peculiarly constituted individuals may show themselves
+ capable of a lifelong enthusiasm, but the multitude is ever spasmodic in
+ its fervour, and begins to slide back to its former apathy as soon as the
+ exciting cause ceases to act.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this we find exemplified in the history of the Priestless People. When
+ it was found that the world did not come to an end, and that the rigorous
+ system of persecution was relaxed, the less excitable natures returned to
+ their homes, and resumed their old mode of life; and when Peter the Great
+ made his politic concessions, many who had declared him to be Antichrist
+ came to suspect that he was really not so black as he was painted. This
+ idea struck deep root in a religious community near Lake Onega (Vuigovski
+ Skit) which had received special privileges on condition of supplying
+ labourers for the neighbouring mines; and here was developed a new theory
+ which opened up a way of reconciliation with the Government. By a more
+ attentive study of Holy Writ and ancient books it was discovered that the
+ reign of Antichrist would consist of two periods. In the former, the Son
+ of Destruction would reign merely in the spiritual sense, and the Faithful
+ would not be much molested; in the latter, he would reign visibly in the
+ flesh, and true believers would be subjected to the most frightful
+ persecution. The second period, it was held, had evidently not yet
+ arrived, for the Faithful now enjoyed "a time of freedom, and not of
+ compulsion or oppression." Whether this theory is strictly in accordance
+ with Apocalyptic prophecy and patristic theology may be doubted, but it
+ fully satisfied those who had already arrived at the conclusion by a
+ different road, and who sought merely a means of justifying their
+ position. Certain it is that very many accepted it, and determined to
+ render unto Caesar the things that were Caesar's, or, in secular language,
+ to pray for the Tsar and to pay their taxes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This ingenious compromise was not accepted by all the Priestless People.
+ On the contrary, many of them regarded it as a woeful backsliding&mdash;a
+ new device of the Evil One; and among these irreconcilables was a certain
+ peasant called Theodosi, a man of little education, but of remarkable
+ intellectual power and unusual strength of character. He raised anew the
+ old fanaticism by his preaching and writings&mdash;widely circulated in
+ manuscript&mdash;and succeeded in founding a new sect in the forest region
+ near the Polish frontier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Priestless Nonconformists thus fell into two sections; the one, called
+ Pomortsi,* accepted at least a partial reconciliation with the civil
+ power; the other, called Theodosians, after their founder, held to the old
+ opinions, and refused to regard the Tsar otherwise than as Antichrist.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ *The word Pomortsi means "those who live near the seashore."
+ It is commonly applied to the inhabitants of the Northern
+ provinces&mdash;that is, those who live near the shore of the
+ White Sea, the only maritime frontier that Russia possessed
+ previous to the conquests of Peter the Great.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ These latter were at first very wild in their fanaticism, but ere long
+ they gave way to the influences which had softened the fanaticism of the
+ Pomortsi. Under the liberal, conciliatory rule of Catherine they lived in
+ contentment, and many of them enriched themselves by trade. Their
+ fanatical zeal and exclusiveness evaporated under the influence of
+ material well-being and constant contact with the outer world, especially
+ after they were allowed to build a monastery in Moscow. The Superior of
+ this monastery, a man of much shrewdness and enormous wealth, succeeded in
+ gaining the favour not only of the lower officials, who could be easily
+ bought, but even of high-placed dignitaries, and for many years he
+ exercised a very real, if undefined, authority over all sections of the
+ Priestless People. "His fame," it is said, "sounded throughout Moscow, and
+ the echoes were heard in Petropol (St. Petersburg), Riga, Astrakhan,
+ Nizhni-Novgorod, and other lands of piety"; and when deputies came to
+ consult him, they prostrated themselves in his presence, as before the
+ great ones of the earth. Living thus not only in peace and plenty, but
+ even in honour and luxury, "the proud Patriarch of the Theodosian Church"
+ could not consistently fulminate against "the ravenous wolves" with whom
+ he was on friendly terms, or excite the fanaticism of his followers by
+ highly coloured descriptions of "the awful sufferings and persecution of
+ God's people in these latter days," as the founder of the sect had been
+ wont to do. Though he could not openly abandon any fundamental doctrines,
+ he allowed the ideas about the reign of Antichrist to fall into the
+ background, and taught by example, if not by precept, that the Faithful
+ might, by prudent concessions, live very comfortably in this present evil
+ world. This seed fell upon soil already prepared for its reception. The
+ Faithful gradually forgot their old savage fanaticism, and they have since
+ contrived, while holding many of their old ideas in theory, to accommodate
+ themselves in practice to the existing order of things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gradual softening and toning down of the original fanaticism in these
+ two sects are strikingly exemplified in their ideas of marriage. According
+ to Orthodox doctrine, marriage is a sacrament which can only be performed
+ by a consecrated priest, and consequently for the Priestless People the
+ celebration of marriage was an impossibility. In the first ages of
+ sectarianism a state of celibacy was quite in accordance with their
+ surroundings. Living in constant fear of their persecutors, and wandering
+ from one place of refuge to another, the sufferers for the Faith had
+ little time or inclination to think of family ties, and readily listened
+ to the monks, who exhorted them to mortify the lusts of the flesh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result, however, proved that celibacy in the creed by no means ensures
+ chastity in practice. Not only in the villages of the Dissenters, but even
+ in those religious communities which professed a more ascetic mode of
+ life, a numerous class of "orphans" began to appear, who knew not who
+ their parents were; and this ignorance of blood-relationship naturally led
+ to incestuous connections. Besides this, the doctrine of celibacy had
+ grave practical inconveniences, for the peasant requires a housewife to
+ attend to domestic concerns and to help him in his agricultural
+ occupations. Thus the necessity of re-establishing family life came to be
+ felt, and the feeling soon found expression in a doctrinal form both among
+ the Pomortsi and among the Theodsians. Learned dissertations were written
+ and disseminated in manuscript copies, violent discussions took place, and
+ at last a great Council was held in Moscow to discuss the question.* The
+ point at issue was never unanimously decided, but many accepted the
+ ingenious arguments in favour of matrimony, and contracted marriages which
+ were, of course, null and void in the eye of the law and of the Church,
+ but valid in all other respects.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * I cannot here enter into the details of this remarkable
+ controversy, but I may say that in studying it I have been
+ frequently astonished by the dialectical power and logical
+ subtlety displayed by the disputants, some of them simple
+ peasants.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This new backsliding of the unstable multitude produced a new outburst of
+ fanaticism among the stubborn few. Some of those who had hitherto sought
+ to conceal the origin of the "orphan" class above referred to now boldly
+ asserted that the existence of this class was a religious necessity,
+ because in order to be saved men must repent, and in order to repent men
+ must sin! At the same time the old ideas about Antichrist were revived and
+ preached with fervour by a peasant called Philip, who founded a new sect
+ called the Philipists. This sect still exists. They hold fast to the old
+ belief that the Tsar is Antichrist, and that the civil and ecclesiastical
+ authorities are the servants of Satan&mdash;an idea that was kept alive by
+ the corruption and extortion for which the Administration was notorious.
+ They do not venture on open resistance to the authorities, but the bolder
+ members take little pains to conceal their opinions and sentiments, and
+ may be easily recognised by their severe aspect, their Puritanical manner,
+ and their Pharisaical horror of everything which they suppose heretical
+ and unclean. Some of them, it is said, carry this fastidiousness to such
+ an extent that they throw away the handle of a door if it has been touched
+ by a heretic!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may seem that we have here reached the extreme limits of fanaticism,
+ but in reality there were men whom even the Pharisaical Puritanism of the
+ Philipists did not satisfy. These new zealots, who appeared in the time of
+ Catherine II., but first became known to the official world in the reign
+ of Nicholas I., rebuked the lukewarmness of their brethren, and founded a
+ new sect in order to preserve intact the asceticism practised immediately
+ after the schism. This sect still exists. They call themselves "Christ's
+ people" (Christoviye Lyudi), but are better known under the popular name
+ of "Wanderers" (Stranniki), or "Fugitives" (Beguny). Of all the sects they
+ are the most hostile to the existing political and social organisation.
+ Not content with condemning the military conscription, the payment of
+ taxes, the acceptance of passports, and everything connected with the
+ civil and ecclesiastical authorities, they consider it sinful to live
+ peaceably among an orthodox&mdash;that is, according to their belief, a
+ heretical&mdash;population, and to have dealings with any who do not share
+ their extreme views. Holding the Antichrist doctrine in the extreme form,
+ they declare that Tsars are the vessels of Satan, that the Established
+ Church is the dwelling-place of the Father of Lies, and that all who
+ submit to the authorities are children of the Devil. According to this
+ creed, those who wish to escape from the wrath to come must have neither
+ houses nor fixed places of abode, must sever all ties that bind them to
+ the world, and must wander about continually from place to place. True
+ Christians are but strangers and pilgrims in the present life, and whoso
+ binds himself to the world will perish with the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such is the theory of these Wanderers, but among them, as among the less
+ fanatical sects, practical necessities have produced concessions and
+ compromises. As it is impossible to lead a nomadic life in Russian
+ forests, the Wanderers have been compelled to admit into their ranks what
+ may be called lay-brethren&mdash;men who nominally belong to the sect, but
+ who live like ordinary mortals and have some rational way of gaining a
+ livelihood. These latter live in the villages or towns, support themselves
+ by agriculture or trade, accept passports from the authorities, pay their
+ taxes regularly, and conduct themselves in all outward respects like loyal
+ subjects. Their chief religious duty consists in giving food and shelter
+ to their more zealous brethren, who have adopted a vagabond life in
+ practise as well as in theory. It is only when they feel death approaching
+ that they consider it necessary to separate themselves from the heretical
+ world, and they effect this by having themselves carried out to some
+ neighbouring wood&mdash;or into a garden if there is no wood at hand&mdash;where
+ they may die in the open air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, we see, there is among the Russian Nonconformist sects what may be
+ called a gradation of fanaticism, in which is reflected the history of the
+ Great Schism. In the Wanderers we have the representatives of those who
+ adopted and preserved the Antichrist doctrine in its extreme form&mdash;the
+ successors of those who fled to the forests to escape from the rage of the
+ Beast and to await the second coming of Christ. In the Philipists we have
+ the representatives of those who adopted these ideas in a somewhat softer
+ form, and who came to recognise the necessity of having some regular means
+ of subsistence until the last trump should be heard. The Theodosians
+ represent those who were in theory at one with the preceding category, but
+ who, having less religious fanaticism, considered it necessary to yield to
+ force and make peace with the Government without sacrificing their
+ convictions. In the Pomortsi we see those who preserved only the religious
+ ideas of the schism, and became reconciled with the civil power. Lastly we
+ have the Old Ritualists, who differed from all the other sects in
+ retaining the old ordinances, and who simply rejected the spiritual
+ authority of the dominant Church. Besides these chief sections of the
+ Nonconformists there are a great many minor denominations (tolki),
+ differing from each other on minor points of doctrine. In certain
+ districts, it is said, nearly every village has one or two independent
+ sects. This is especially the case among the Don Cossacks and the Cossacks
+ of the Ural, who are in part descendants of the men who fled from the
+ early persecutions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the sects the Old Ritualists stand nearest to the official Church.
+ They hold the same dogmas, practise the same rites, and differ only in
+ trifling ceremonial matters, which few people consider essential. In the
+ hope of inducing them to return to the official fold the Government
+ created at the beginning of last century special churches, in which they
+ were allowed to retain their ceremonial peculiarities on condition of
+ accepting regularly consecrated priests and submitting to ecclesiastical
+ jurisdiction. As yet the design has not met with much success. The great
+ majority of the Old Ritualists regard it as a trap, and assert that the
+ Church in making this concession has been guilty of self-contradiction.
+ "The Ecclesiastical Council of Moscow," they say, "anathematised our
+ forefathers for holding to the old ritual, and declared that the whole
+ course of nature would be changed sooner than the curse be withdrawn. The
+ course of nature has not been changed, but the anathema has been
+ cancelled." This argument ought to have a certain weight with those who
+ believe in the infallibility of Ecclesiastical Councils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards the Priestless People the Government has always acted in a much
+ less conciliatory spirit. Its severity has been sometimes justified on the
+ ground that sectarianism has had a political as well as a religious
+ significance. A State like Russia cannot overlook the existence of sects
+ which preach the duty of systematic resistance to the civil and
+ ecclesiastical authorities and hold doctrines which lead to the grossest
+ immorality. This argument, it must be admitted, is not without a certain
+ force, but it seems to me that the policy adopted tended to increase
+ rather than diminish the evils which it sought to cure. Instead of
+ dispelling the absurd idea that the Tsar was Antichrist by a system of
+ strict and evenhanded justice, punishing merely actual crimes and
+ delinquencies, the Government confirmed the notion in the minds of
+ thousands by persecuting those who had committed no crime and who desired
+ merely to worship God according to their conscience. Above all it erred in
+ opposing and punishing those marriages which, though legally irregular,
+ were the best possible means of diminishing fanaticism, by leading back
+ the fanatics to healthy social life. Fortunately these errors have now
+ been abandoned. A policy of greater clemency and conciliation has been
+ adopted, and has proved much more efficacious than persecution. The
+ Dissenters have not returned to the official fold, but they have lost much
+ of their old fanaticism and exclusiveness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In respect of numbers the sectarians compose a very formidable body. Of
+ Old Ritualists and Priestless People there are, it is said, no less than
+ eleven millions; and the Protestant and fantastical sects comprise
+ probably about five millions more. If these numbers be correct, the
+ sectarians constitute about an eighth of the whole population of the
+ Empire. They count in their ranks none of the nobles&mdash;none of the
+ so-called enlightened class&mdash;but they include in their number a
+ respectable proportion of the peasants, a third of the rich merchant
+ class, the majority of the Don Cossacks, and nearly all the Cossacks of
+ the Ural.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under these circumstances it is important to know how far the sectarians
+ are politically disaffected. Some people imagine that in the event of an
+ insurrection or a foreign invasion they might rise against the Government,
+ whilst others believe that this supposed danger is purely imaginary. For
+ my own part I agree with the latter opinion, which is strongly supported
+ by the history of many important events, such as the French invasion in
+ 1812, the Crimean War, and the last Polish insurrection. The great
+ majority of the Schismatics and heretics are, I believe, loyal subjects of
+ the Tsar. The more violent sects, which are alone capable of active
+ hostility against the authorities, are weak in numbers, and regard all
+ outsiders with such profound mistrust that they are wholly impervious to
+ inflammatory influences from without. Even if all the sects were capable
+ of active hostility, they would not be nearly so formidable as their
+ numbers seem to indicate, for they are hostile to each other, and are
+ wholly incapable of combining for a common purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though sectarianism is thus by no means a serious political danger, it has
+ nevertheless a considerable political significance. It proves
+ satisfactorily that the Russian people is by no means so docile and
+ pliable as is commonly supposed, and that it is capable of showing a
+ stubborn, passive resistance to authority when it believes great interests
+ to be at stake. The dogged energy which it has displayed in asserting for
+ centuries its religious liberty may perhaps some day be employed in the
+ arena of secular politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ CHURCH AND STATE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The Russian Orthodox Church&mdash;Russia Outside of the Mediaeval Papal
+ Commonwealth&mdash;Influence of the Greek Church&mdash;Ecclesiastical
+ History of Russia&mdash;Relations between Church and State&mdash;Eastern
+ Orthodoxy and the Russian National Church&mdash;The Synod&mdash;Ecclesiastical
+ Grumbling&mdash;Local Ecclesiastical Administration&mdash;The Black Clergy
+ and the Monasteries&mdash;The Character of the Eastern Church Reflected in
+ the History of Religious Art&mdash;Practical Consequences&mdash;The Union
+ Scheme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the curious world of heretics and Dissenters let us pass now to the
+ Russian Orthodox Church, to which the great majority of the Russian people
+ belong. It has played an important part in the national history, and has
+ exercised a powerful influence in the formation of the national character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russians are in the habit of patriotically and proudly congratulating
+ themselves on the fact that their forefathers always resisted successfully
+ the aggressive tendencies of the Papacy, but it may be doubted whether,
+ from a worldly point of view, the freedom from Papal authority has been an
+ unmixed blessing for the country. If the Popes failed to realise their
+ grand design of creating a vast European empire based on theocratic
+ principles, they succeeded at least in inspiring with a feeling of
+ brotherhood and a vague consciousness of common interest all the nations
+ which acknowledged their spiritual supremacy. These nations, whilst
+ remaining politically independent and frequently coming into hostile
+ contact with each other, all looked to Rome as the capital of the
+ Christian world, and to the Pope as the highest terrestrial authority.
+ Though the Church did not annihilate nationality, it made a wide breach in
+ the political barriers, and formed a channel for international
+ communication by which the social and intellectual progress of each nation
+ became known to all the other members of the great Christian confederacy.
+ Throughout the length and breadth of the Papal Commonwealth educated men
+ had a common language, a common literature, a common scientific method,
+ and to a certain extent a common jurisprudence. Western Christendom was
+ thus all through the Middle Ages not merely an abstract conception or a
+ geographical expression: if not a political, it was at least a religious
+ and intellectual unit, and all the countries of which it was composed
+ benefited more or less by the connection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For centuries Russia stood outside of this religious and intellectual
+ confederation, for her Church connected her not with Rome, but with
+ Constantinople, and Papal Europe looked upon her as belonging to the
+ barbarous East. When the Mongol hosts swept over her plains, burnt her
+ towns and villages, and finally incorporated her into the great empire of
+ Genghis khan, the so-called Christian world took no interest in the
+ struggle except in so far as its own safety was threatened. And as time
+ wore on, the barriers which separated the two great sections of
+ Christendom became more and more formidable. The aggressive pretensions
+ and ambitious schemes of the Vatican produced in the Greek Orthodox world
+ a profound antipathy to the Roman Catholic Church and to Western influence
+ of every kind. So strong was this aversion that when the nations of the
+ West awakened in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries from their
+ intellectual lethargy and began to move forward on the path of
+ intellectual and material progress, Russia not only remained unmoved, but
+ looked on the new civilisation with suspicion and fear as a thing
+ heretical and accursed. We have here one of the chief reasons why Russia,
+ at the present day, is in many respects less civilised than the nations of
+ Western Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is not merely in this negative way that the acceptance of
+ Christianity from Constantinople has affected the fate of Russia. The
+ Greek Church, whilst excluding Roman Catholic civilisation, exerted at the
+ same time a powerful positive influence on the historical development of
+ the nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Church of the West inherited from old Rome something of that logical,
+ juridical, administrative spirit which had created the Roman law, and
+ something of that ambition and dogged, energetic perseverance that had
+ formed nearly the whole known world into a great centralised empire. The
+ Bishops of Rome early conceived the design of reconstructing that old
+ empire on a new basis, and long strove to create a universal Christian
+ theocratic State, in which kings and other civil authorities should be the
+ subordinates of Christ's Vicar upon earth. The Eastern Church, on the
+ contrary, has remained true to her Byzantine traditions, and has never
+ dreamed of such lofty pretensions. Accustomed to lean on the civil power,
+ she has always been content to play a secondary part, and has never
+ strenuously resisted the formation of national churches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For about two centuries after the introduction of Christianity&mdash;from
+ 988 to 1240&mdash;Russia formed, ecclesiastically speaking, part of the
+ Patriarchate of Constantinople. The metropolitans and the bishops were
+ Greek by birth and education, and the ecclesiastical administration was
+ guided and controlled by the Byzantine Patriarchs. But from the time of
+ the Mongol invasion, when communication with Constantinople became more
+ difficult and educated native priests had become more numerous, this
+ complete dependence on the Patriarch of Constantinople ceased. The Princes
+ gradually arrogated to themselves the right of choosing the Metropolitan
+ of Kief&mdash;who was at that time the chief ecclesiastical dignitary in
+ Russia&mdash;and merely sent their nominees to Constantinople for
+ consecration. About 1448 this formality came to be dispensed with, and the
+ Metropolitan was commonly consecrated by a Council of Russian bishops. A
+ further step in the direction of ecclesiastical autonomy was taken in
+ 1589, when the Tsar succeeded in procuring the consecration of a Russian
+ Patriarch, equal in dignity and authority to the Patriarchs of
+ Constantinople, Jerusalem, Antioch, and Alexandria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all matters of external form the Patriarch of Moscow was a very
+ important personage. He exercised a certain influence in civil as well as
+ ecclesiastical affairs, bore the official title of "Great Lord" (Veliki
+ Gosudar), which had previously been reserved for the civil head of the
+ State, and habitually received from the people scarcely less veneration
+ than the Tsar himself. But in reality he possessed very little independent
+ power. The Tsar was the real ruler in ecclesiastical as well as in civil
+ affairs.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * As this is frequently denied by Russians, it may be well
+ to quote one authority out of many that might be cited.
+ Bishop Makarii, whose erudition and good faith are alike
+ above suspicion, says of Dmitri of the Don: "He arrogated to
+ himself full, unconditional power over the Head of the
+ Russian Church, and through him over the whole Russian
+ Church itself." ("Istoriya Russkoi Tserkvi," V., p. 101.)
+ This is said of a Grand Prince who had strong rivals and had
+ to treat the Church as an ally. When the Grand Princes
+ became Tsars and had no longer any rivals, their power was
+ certainly not diminished. Any further confirmation that may
+ be required will be found in the Life of the famous
+ Patriarch Nikon.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Russian Patriarchate came to an end in the time of Peter the Great.
+ Peter wished, among other things, to reform the ecclesiastical
+ administration, and to introduce into his country many novelties which the
+ majority of the clergy and of the people regarded as heretical; and he
+ clearly perceived that a bigoted, energetic Patriarch might throw
+ considerable obstacles in his way, and cause him infinite annoyance.
+ Though such a Patriarch might be deposed without any flagrant violation of
+ the canonical formalities, the operation would necessarily be attended
+ with great trouble and loss of time. Peter was no friend of roundabout,
+ tortuous methods, and preferred to remove the difficulty in his usual
+ thorough, violent fashion. When the Patriarch Adrian died, the customary
+ short interregnum was prolonged for twenty years, and when the people had
+ thus become accustomed to having no Patriarch, it was announced that no
+ more Patriarchs would be elected. Their place was supplied by an
+ ecclesiastical council, or Synod, in which, as a contemporary explained,
+ "the mainspring was Peter's power, and the pendulum his understanding."
+ The great autocrat justly considered that such a council could be much
+ more easily managed than a stubborn Patriarch, and the wisdom of the
+ measure has been duly appreciated by succeeding sovereigns. Though the
+ idea of re-establishing the Patriarchate has more than once been raised,
+ it has never been carried into execution. The Holy Synod remains the
+ highest ecclesiastical authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Emperor? What is his relation to the Synod and to the Church in
+ general?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is a question about which zealous Orthodox Russians are extremely
+ sensitive. If a foreigner ventures to hint in their presence that the
+ Emperor seems to have a considerable influence in the Church, he may
+ inadvertently produce a little outburst of patriotic warmth and virtuous
+ indignation. The truth is that many Russians have a pet theory on this
+ subject, and have at the same time a dim consciousness that the theory is
+ not quite in accordance with reality. They hold theoretically that the
+ Orthodox Church has no "Head" but Christ, and is in some peculiar
+ undefined sense entirely independent of all terrestrial authority. In this
+ respect it is often contrasted with the Anglican Church, much to the
+ disadvantage of the latter; and the supposed differences between the two
+ are made a theme for semi-religious, semi-patriotic exultation. Khomiakof,
+ for instance, in one of his most vigorous poems, predicts that God will
+ one day take the destiny of the world out of the hands of England in order
+ to give it to Russia, and he adduces as one of the reasons for this
+ transfer the fact that England "has chained, with sacrilegious hand, the
+ Church of God to the pedestal of the vain earthly power." So far the
+ theory. As to the facts, it is unquestionable that the Tsar exercises a
+ much greater influence in ecclesiastical affairs than the King and
+ Parliament in England. All who know the internal history of Russia are
+ aware that the Government does not draw a clear line of distinction
+ between the temporal and the spiritual, and that it occasionally uses the
+ ecclesiastical organisation for political purposes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What, then, are the relations between Church and State?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To avoid confusion, we must carefully distinguish between the Eastern
+ Orthodox Church as a whole and that section of it which is known as the
+ Russian Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Eastern Orthodox Church* is, properly speaking, a confederation of
+ independent churches without any central authority&mdash;a unity founded
+ on the possession of a common dogma and on the theoretical but now
+ unrealisable possibility of holding Ecumenical Councils. The Russian
+ National Church is one of the members of this ecclesiastical
+ confederation. In matters of faith it is bound by the decisions of the
+ ancient Ecumenical Councils, but in all other respects it enjoys complete
+ independence and autonomy.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Or Greek Orthodox Church, as it is sometimes called.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In relation to the Orthodox Church as a whole the Emperor of Russia is
+ nothing more than a simple member, and can no more interfere with its
+ dogmas or ceremonial than a King of Italy or an Emperor of the French
+ could modify Roman Catholic theology; but in relation to the Russian
+ National Church his position is peculiar. He is described in one of the
+ fundamental laws as "the supreme defender and preserver of the dogmas of
+ the dominant faith," and immediately afterwards it is said that "the
+ autocratic power acts in the ecclesiastical administration by means of the
+ most Holy Governing Synod, created by it."* This describes very fairly the
+ relations between the Emperor and the Church. He is merely the defender of
+ the dogmas, and cannot in the least modify them; but he is at the same
+ time the chief administrator, and uses the Synod as an instrument.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Svod Zakonov I., 42, 43.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Some ingenious people who wish to prove that the creation of the Synod was
+ not an innovation represent the institution as a resuscitation of the
+ ancient local councils; but this view is utterly untenable. The Synod is
+ not a council of deputies from various sections of the Church, but a
+ permanent college, or ecclesiastical senate, the members of which are
+ appointed and dismissed by the Emperor as he thinks fit. It has no
+ independent legislative authority, for its legislative projects do not
+ become law till they have received the Imperial sanction; and they are
+ always published, not in the name of the Church, but in the name of the
+ Supreme Power. Even in matters of simple administration it is not
+ independent, for all its resolutions require the consent of the Procureur,
+ a layman nominated by his Majesty. In theory this functionary protests
+ only against those resolutions which are not in accordance with the civil
+ law of the country; but as he alone has the right to address the Emperor
+ directly on ecclesiastical concerns, and as all communications between the
+ Emperor and the Synod pass through his hands, he possesses in reality
+ considerable power. Besides this, he can always influence the individual
+ members by holding out prospects of advancement and decorations, and if
+ this device fails, he can make refractory members retire, and fill up
+ their places with men of more pliant disposition. A Council constituted in
+ this way cannot, of course, display much independence of thought or
+ action, especially in a country like Russia, where no one ventures to
+ oppose openly the Imperial will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must not, however, be supposed that the Russian ecclesiastics regard
+ the Imperial authority with jealousy or dislike. They are all most loyal
+ subjects, and warm adherents of autocracy. Those ideas of ecclesiastical
+ independence which are so common in Western Europe, and that spirit of
+ opposition to the civil power which animates the Roman Catholic clergy,
+ are entirely foreign to their minds. If a bishop sometimes complains to an
+ intimate friend that he has been brought to St. Petersburg and made a
+ member of the Synod merely to append his signature to official papers and
+ to give his consent to foregone conclusions, his displeasure is directed,
+ not against the Emperor, but against the Procureur. He is full of loyalty
+ and devotion to the Tsar, and has no desire to see his Majesty excluded
+ from all influence in ecclesiastical affairs; but he feels saddened and
+ humiliated when he finds that the whole government of the Church is in the
+ hands of a lay functionary, who may be a military man, and who looks at
+ all matters from a layman's point of view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This close connection between Church and State and the thoroughly national
+ character of the Russian Church is well illustrated by the history of the
+ local ecclesiastical administration. The civil and the ecclesiastical
+ administration have always had the same character and have always been
+ modified by the same influences. The terrorism which was largely used by
+ the Muscovite Tsars and brought to a climax by Peter the Great appeared
+ equally in both. In the episcopal circulars, as in the Imperial ukazes, we
+ find frequent mention of "most cruel corporal punishment," "cruel
+ punishment with whips, so that the delinquent and others may not acquire
+ the habit of practising such insolence," and much more of the same kind.
+ And these terribly severe measures were sometimes directed against very
+ venial offences. The Bishop of Vologda, for instance, in 1748 decrees
+ "cruel corporal punishment" against priests who wear coarse and ragged
+ clothes,* and the records of the Consistorial courts contain abundant
+ proof that such decrees were rigorously executed. When Catherine II.
+ introduced a more humane spirit into the civil administration, corporal
+ punishment was at once abolished in the Consistorial courts, and the
+ procedure was modified according to the accepted maxims of civil
+ jurisprudence. But I must not weary the reader with tiresome historical
+ details. Suffice it to say that, from the time of Peter the Great
+ downwards, the character of all the more energetic sovereigns is reflected
+ in the history of the ecclesiastical administration.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Znamenski, "Prikhodskoe Dukhovenstvo v Rossii so vremeni
+ reformy Petra," Kazan, 1873.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Each province, or "government," forms a diocese, and the bishop, like the
+ civil governor, has a Council which theoretically controls his power, but
+ practically has no controlling influence whatever. The Consistorial
+ Council, which has in the theory of ecclesiastical procedure a very
+ imposing appearance, is in reality the bishop's chancellerie, and its
+ members are little more than secretaries, whose chief object is to make
+ themselves agreeable to their superior. And it must be confessed that, so
+ long as they remain what they are, the less power they possess the better
+ it will be for those who have the misfortune to be under their
+ jurisdiction. The higher dignitaries have at least larger aims and a
+ certain consciousness of the dignity of their position; but the lower
+ officials, who have no such healthy restraints and receive ridiculously
+ small salaries, grossly misuse the little authority which they possess,
+ and habitually pilfer and extort in the most shameless manner. The
+ Consistories are, in fact, what the public offices were in the time of
+ Nicholas I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The higher ecclesiastical administration has always been in the hands of
+ the monks, or "Black Clergy," as they are commonly termed, who form a
+ large and influential class. The monks who first settled in Russia were,
+ like those who first visited north-western Europe, men of the earnest,
+ ascetic, missionary type. Filled with zeal for the glory of God and the
+ salvation of souls, they took little or no thought for the morrow, and
+ devoutly believed that their Heavenly Father, without whose knowledge no
+ sparrow falls to the ground, would provide for their humble wants. Poor,
+ clad in rags, eating the most simple fare, and ever ready to share what
+ they had with any one poorer than themselves, they performed faithfully
+ and earnestly the work which their Master had given them to do. But this
+ ideal of monastic life soon gave way in Russia, as in the West, to
+ practices less simple and austere. By the liberal donations and bequests
+ of the faithful the monasteries became rich in gold, in silver, in
+ precious stones, and above all in land and serfs. Troitsa, for instance,
+ possessed at one time 120,000 serfs and a proportionate amount of land,
+ and it is said that at the beginning of the eighteenth century more than a
+ fourth of the entire population had fallen under the jurisdiction of the
+ Church. Many of the monasteries engaged in commerce, and the monks were,
+ if we may credit Fletcher, who visited Russia in 1588, the most
+ intelligent merchants of the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the eighteenth century the Church lands were secularised, and the
+ serfs of the Church became serfs of the State. This was a severe blow for
+ the monasteries, but it did not prove fatal, as many people predicted.
+ Some monasteries were abolished and others were reduced to extreme
+ poverty, but many survived and prospered. These could no longer possess
+ serfs, but they had still three sources of revenue: a limited amount of
+ real property, Government subsidies, and the voluntary offerings of the
+ faithful. At present there are about 500 monastic establishments, and the
+ great majority of them, though not wealthy, have revenues more than
+ sufficient to satisfy all the requirements of an ascetic life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus in Russia, as in Western Europe, the history of monastic institutions
+ is composed of three chapters, which may be briefly entitled: asceticism
+ and missionary enterprise; wealth, luxury, and corruption; secularisation
+ of property and decline. But between Eastern and Western monasticism there
+ is at least one marked difference. The monasticism of the West made at
+ various epochs of its history a vigorous, spontaneous effort at
+ self-regeneration, which found expression in the foundation of separate
+ Orders, each of which proposed to itself some special aim&mdash;some
+ special sphere of usefulness. In Russia we find no similar phenomenon.
+ Here the monasteries never deviated from the rules of St. Basil, which
+ restrict the members to religious ceremonies, prayer, and contemplation.
+ From time to time a solitary individual raised his voice against the
+ prevailing abuses, or retired from his monastery to spend the remainder of
+ his days in ascetic solitude; but neither in the monastic population as a
+ whole, nor in any particular monastery, do we find at any time a
+ spontaneous, vigorous movement towards reform. During the last two hundred
+ years reforms have certainly been effected, but they have all been the
+ work of the civil power, and in the realisation of them the monks have
+ shown little more than the virtue of resignation. Here, as elsewhere, we
+ have evidence of that inertness, apathy, and want of spontaneous vigour
+ which form one of the most characteristic traits of Russian national life.
+ In this, as in other departments of national activity, the spring of
+ action has lain not in the people, but in the Government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is only fair to the monks to state that in their dislike to progress
+ and change of every kind they merely reflect the traditional spirit of the
+ Church to which they belong. The Russian Church, like the Eastern Orthodox
+ Church generally, is essentially conservative. Anything in the nature of a
+ religious revival is foreign to her traditions and character. Quieta non
+ movere is her fundamental principle of conduct. She prides herself as
+ being above terrestrial influences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The modifications that have been made in her administrative organisation
+ have not affected her inner nature. In spirit and character she is now
+ what she was under the Patriarchs in the time of the Muscovite Tsars,
+ holding fast to the promise that no jot or tittle shall pass from the law
+ till all be fulfilled. To those who talk about the requirements of modern
+ life and modern science she turns a deaf ear. Partly from the predominance
+ which she gives to the ceremonial element, partly from the fact that her
+ chief aim is to preserve unmodified the doctrine and ceremonial as
+ determined by the early Ecumenical Councils, and partly from the low state
+ of general culture among the clergy, she has ever remained outside of the
+ intellectual movements. The attempts of the Roman Catholic Church to
+ develop the traditional dogmas by definition and deduction, and the
+ efforts of Protestants to reconcile their creeds with progressive science
+ and the ever-varying intellectual currents of the time, are alike foreign
+ to her nature. Hence she has produced no profound theological treatises
+ conceived in a philosophical spirit, and has made no attempt to combat the
+ spirit of infidelity in its modern forms. Profoundly convinced that her
+ position is impregnable, she has "let the nations rave," and scarcely
+ deigned to cast a glance at their intellectual and religious struggles. In
+ a word, she is "in the world, but not of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we wish to see represented in a visible form the peculiar
+ characteristics of the Russian Church, we have only to glance at Russian
+ religious art, and compare it with that of Western Europe. In the West,
+ from the time of the Renaissance downwards, religious art has kept pace
+ with artistic progress. Gradually it emancipated itself from archaic forms
+ and childish symbolism, converted the lifeless typical figures into living
+ individuals, lit up their dull eyes and expressionless faces with human
+ intelligence and human feeling, and finally aimed at archaeological
+ accuracy in costume and other details. Thus in the West the Icon grew
+ slowly into the naturalistic portrait, and the rude symbolical groups
+ developed gradually into highly-finished historical pictures. In Russia
+ the history of religious art has been entirely different. Instead of
+ distinctive schools of painting and great religious artists, there has
+ been merely an anonymous traditional craft, destitute of any artistic
+ individuality. In all the productions of this craft the old Byzantine
+ forms have been faithfully and rigorously preserved, and we can see
+ reflected in the modern Icons&mdash;stiff, archaic, expressionless&mdash;the
+ immobility of the Eastern Church in general, and of the Russian Church in
+ particular.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the Roman Catholic, who struggles against science as soon as it
+ contradicts traditional conceptions, and to the Protestant, who strives to
+ bring his religious beliefs into accordance with his scientific knowledge,
+ the Russian Church may seem to resemble an antediluvian petrifaction, or a
+ cumbrous line-of-battle ship that has been long stranded. It must be
+ confessed, however, that the serene inactivity for which she is
+ distinguished has had very valuable practical consequences. The Russian
+ clergy have neither that haughty, aggressive intolerance which
+ characterises their Roman Catholic brethren, nor that bitter,
+ uncharitable, sectarian spirit which is too often to be found among
+ Protestants. They allow not only to heretics, but also to members of their
+ own communion, the most complete intellectual freedom, and never think of
+ anathematising any one for his scientific or unscientific opinions. All
+ that they demand is that those who have been born within the pale of
+ Orthodoxy should show the Church a certain nominal allegiance; and in this
+ matter of allegiance they are by no mean very exacting. So long as a
+ member refrains from openly attacking the Church and from going over to
+ another confession, he may entirely neglect all religious ordinances and
+ publicly profess scientific theories logically inconsistent with any kind
+ of dogmatic religious belief without the slightest danger of incurring
+ ecclesiastical censure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This apathetic tolerance may be partly explained by the national
+ character, but it is also to some extent due to the peculiar relations
+ between Church and State. The government vigilantly protects the Church
+ from attack, and at the same time prevents her from attacking her enemies.
+ Hence religious questions are never discussed in the Press, and the
+ ecclesiastical literature is all historical, homiletic, or devotional. The
+ authorities allow public oral discussions to be held during Lent in the
+ Kremlin of Moscow between members of the State Church and Old Ritualists;
+ but these debates are not theological in our sense of the term. They turn
+ exclusively on details of Church history, and on the minutiae of
+ ceremonial observance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few years ago there was a good deal of vague talk about a possible union
+ of the Russian and Anglican Churches. If by "union" is meant simply union
+ in the bonds of brotherly love, there can be, of course, no objection to
+ any amount of such pia desideria; but if anything more real and practical
+ is intended, the project is an absurdity. A real union of the Russian and
+ Anglican Churches would be as difficult of realisation, and is as
+ undesirable, as a union of the Russian Council of State and the British
+ House of Commons.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * I suppose that the more serious partisans of the union
+ scheme mean union with the Eastern Orthodox, and not with
+ the Russian, Church. To them the above remarks are not
+ addressed. Their scheme is, in my opinion, unrealisable and
+ undesirable, but it contains nothing absurd.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE NOBLESSE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The Nobles In Early Times&mdash;The Mongol Domination&mdash;The Tsardom of
+ Muscovy&mdash;Family Dignity&mdash;Reforms of Peter the Great&mdash;The
+ Nobles Adopt West-European Conceptions&mdash;Abolition of Obligatory
+ Service&mdash;Influence of Catherine II.&mdash;The Russian Dvoryanstvo
+ Compared with the French Noblesse and the English Aristocracy&mdash;Russian
+ Titles&mdash;Probable Future of the Russian Noblesse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hitherto I have been compelling the reader to move about among what we
+ should call the lower classes&mdash;peasants, burghers, traders, parish
+ priests, Dissenters, heretics, Cossacks, and the like&mdash;and he feels
+ perhaps inclined to complain that he has had no opportunity of mixing with
+ what old-fashioned people call gentle-folk and persons of quality. By way
+ of making amends to him for this reprehensible conduct on my part, I
+ propose now to present him to the whole Noblesse* in a body, not only
+ those at present living, but also their near and distant ancestors, right
+ back to the foundation of the Russian Empire a thousand years ago.
+ Thereafter I shall introduce him to some of the country families and
+ invite him to make with me a few country-house visits.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * I use here a foreign, in preference to an English, term,
+ because the word "Nobility" would convey a false impression.
+ Etymologically the Russian word "Dvoryanin" means a Courtier
+ (from Dvor=court); but this term is equally objectionable,
+ because the great majority of the Dvoryanstvo have nothing
+ to do with the Court.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the old times, when Russia was merely a collection of some seventy
+ independent principalities, each reigning prince was surrounded by a group
+ of armed men, composed partly of Boyars, or large landed proprietors, and
+ partly of knights, or soldiers of fortune. These men, who formed the
+ Noblesse of the time, were to a certain extent under the authority of the
+ Prince, but they were by no means mere obedient, silent executors of his
+ will. The Boyars might refuse to take part in his military expeditions,
+ and the "free-lances" might leave his service and seek employment
+ elsewhere. If he wished to go to war without their consent, they could say
+ to him, as they did on one occasion, "You have planned this yourself,
+ Prince, so we will not go with you, for we knew nothing of it." Nor was
+ this resistance to the princely will always merely passive. Once, in the
+ principality of Galitch, the armed men seized their prince, killed his
+ favourites, burned his mistress, and made him swear that he would in
+ future live with his lawful wife. To his successor, who had married the
+ wife of a priest, they spoke thus: "We have not risen against YOU, Prince,
+ but we will not do reverence to a priest's wife: we will put her to death,
+ and then you may marry whom you please." Even the energetic Bogolubski,
+ one of the most remarkable of the old Princes, did not succeed in having
+ his own way. When he attempted to force the Boyars he met with stubborn
+ opposition, and was finally assassinated. From these incidents, which
+ might be indefinitely multiplied from the old chronicles, we see that in
+ the early period of Russian history the Boyars and knights were a body of
+ free men, possessing a considerable amount of political power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the Mongol domination this political equilibrium was destroyed. When
+ the country had been conquered, the Princes became servile vassals of the
+ Khan and arbitrary rulers towards their own subjects. The political
+ significance of the nobles was thereby greatly diminished. It was not,
+ however, by any means annihilated. Though the Prince no longer depended
+ entirely on their support, he had an interest in retaining their services,
+ to protect his territory in case of sudden attack, or to increase his
+ possessions at the expense of his neighbours when a convenient opportunity
+ presented itself. Theoretically, such conquests were impossible, for all
+ removing of the ancient landmarks depended on the decision of the Khan;
+ but in reality the Khan paid little attention to the affairs of his
+ vassals so long as the tribute was regularly paid; and much took place in
+ Russia without his permission. We find, therefore, in some of the
+ principalities the old relations still subsisting under Mongol rule. The
+ famous Dmitri of the Don, for instance, when on his death-bed, speaks thus
+ to his Boyars: "You know my habits and my character; I was born among you,
+ grew up among you, governed with you&mdash;fighting by your side, showing
+ you honour and love, and placing you over towns and districts. I loved
+ your children, and did evil to no one. I rejoiced with you in your joy,
+ mourned with you in your grief, and called you the princes of my land."
+ Then, turning to his children, he adds, as a parting advice: "Love your
+ Boyars, my children; show them the honour which their services merit, and
+ undertake nothing without their consent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Grand Princes of Moscow brought the other principalities under
+ their power, and formed them into the Tsardom of Muscovy, the nobles
+ descended another step in the political scale. So long as there were many
+ principalities they could quit the service of a Prince as soon as he gave
+ them reason to be discontented, knowing that they would be well received
+ by one of his rivals; but now they had no longer any choice. The only
+ rival of Moscow was Lithuania, and precautions were taken to prevent the
+ discontented from crossing the Lithuanian frontier. The nobles were no
+ longer voluntary adherents of a Prince, but had become subjects of a Tsar;
+ and the Tsars were not as the old Princes had been. By a violent legal
+ fiction they conceived themselves to be the successors of the Byzantine
+ Emperors, and created a new court ceremonial, borrowed partly from
+ Constantinople and partly from the Mongol Horde. They no longer associated
+ familiarly with the Boyars, and no longer asked their advice, but treated
+ them rather as menials. When the nobles entered their august master's
+ presence they prostrated themselves in Oriental fashion&mdash;occasionally
+ as many as thirty times&mdash;and when they incurred his displeasure they
+ were summarily flogged or executed, according to the Tsar's good pleasure.
+ In succeeding to the power of the Khans, the Tsars had adopted, we see, a
+ good deal of the Mongol system of government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may seem strange that a class of men which had formerly shown a proud
+ spirit of independence should have submitted quietly to such humiliation
+ and oppression without making a serious effort to curb the new power,
+ which had no longer a Tartar Horde at its back to quell opposition. But we
+ must remember that the nobles, as well as the Princes, had passed in the
+ meantime through the school of the Mongol domination. In the course of two
+ centuries they had gradually become accustomed to despotic rule in the
+ Oriental sense. If they felt their position humiliating and irksome, they
+ must have felt, too, how difficult it was to better it. Their only
+ resource lay in combining against the common oppressor; and we have only
+ to glance at the motley, disorganised group, as they cluster round the
+ Tsar, to perceive that combination was extremely difficult. We can
+ distinguish there the mediatised Princes, still harbouring designs for the
+ recovery of their independence; the Moscow Boyars, jealous of their family
+ honour and proud of Muscovite supremacy; Tartar Murzi, who have submitted
+ to be baptised and have received land like the other nobles; the
+ Novgorodian magnate, who cannot forget the ancient glory of his native
+ city; Lithuanian nobles, who find it more profitable to serve the Tsar
+ than their own sovereign; petty chiefs who have fled from the opposition
+ of the Teutonic order; and soldiers of fortune from every part of Russia.
+ Strong, permanent political factors are not easily formed out of such
+ heterogeneous material.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of the sixteenth century the old dynasty became extinct, and
+ after a short period of political anarchy, commonly called "the troublous
+ times" (smutnoe vremya), the Romanof family were raised to the throne by
+ the will of the people, or at least by those who were assumed to be its
+ representatives. By this change the Noblesse acquired a somewhat better
+ position. They were no longer exposed to capricious tyranny and barbarous
+ cruelty, such as they had experienced at the hands of Ivan the Terrible,
+ but they did not, as a class, gain any political influence. There were
+ still rival families and rival factions, but there were no political
+ parties in the proper sense of the term, and the highest aim of families
+ and factions was to gain the favour of the Tsar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The frequent quarrels about precedence which took place among the rival
+ families at this period form one of the most curious episodes of Russian
+ history. The old patriarchal conception of the family as a unit, one and
+ indivisible, was still so strong among these men that the elevation or
+ degradation of one member of a family was considered to affect deeply the
+ honour of all the other members. Each noble family had its rank in a
+ recognised scale of dignity, according to the rank which it held, or had
+ previously held, in the Tsar's service; and a whole family would have
+ considered itself dishonoured if one of its members accepted a post lower
+ than that to which he was entitled. Whenever a vacant place in the service
+ was filled up, the subordinates of the successful candidate examined the
+ official records and the genealogical trees of their families, in order to
+ discover whether some ancestor of their new superior had not served under
+ one of their own ancestors. If the subordinate found such a case, he
+ complained to the Tsar that it was not becoming for him to serve under a
+ man who had less family honour than himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfounded complaints of this kind often entailed imprisonment or corporal
+ punishment, but in spite of this the quarrels for precedence were very
+ frequent. At the commencement of a campaign many such disputes were sure
+ to arise, and the Tsar's decision was not always accepted by the party who
+ considered himself aggrieved. I have met at least with one example of a
+ great dignitary voluntarily mutilating his hand in order to escape the
+ necessity of serving under a man whom he considered his inferior in family
+ dignity. Even at the Tsar's table these rivalries sometimes produced
+ unseemly incidents, for it was almost impossible to arrange the places so
+ as to satisfy all the guests. In one recorded instance a noble who
+ received a place lower than that to which he considered himself entitled
+ openly declared to the Tsar that he would rather be condemned to death
+ than submit to such an indignity. In another instance of a similar kind
+ the refractory guest was put on his chair by force, but saved his family
+ honour by slipping under the table!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next transformation of the Noblesse was effected by Peter the Great.
+ Peter was by nature and position an autocrat, and could brook no
+ opposition. Having set before himself a great aim, he sought everywhere
+ obedient, intelligent, energetic instruments to carry out his designs. He
+ himself served the State zealously&mdash;as a common artisan, when he
+ considered it necessary&mdash;and he insisted on all his subjects doing
+ likewise, under pain of merciless punishment. To noble birth and long
+ pedigrees he habitually showed a most democratic, or rather autocratic,
+ indifference. Intent on obtaining the service of living men, he paid no
+ attention to the claims of dead ancestors, and gave to his servants the
+ pay and honour which their services merited, irrespectively of birth or
+ social position. Hence many of his chief coadjutors had no connection with
+ the old Russian families. Count Yaguzhinski, who long held one of the most
+ important posts in the State, was the son of a poor sacristan; Count
+ Devier was a Portuguese by birth, and had been a cabin-boy; Baron Shafirof
+ was a Jew; Hannibal, who died with the rank of Commander in Chief, was a
+ negro who had been bought in Constantinople; and his Serene Highness
+ Prince Menshikof had begun life, it was said, as a baker's apprentice! For
+ the future, noble birth was to count for nothing. The service of the State
+ was thrown open to men of all ranks, and personal merit was to be the only
+ claim to promotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This must have seemed to the Conservatives of the time a most
+ revolutionary and reprehensible proceeding, but it did not satisfy the
+ reforming tendencies of the great autocrat. He went a step further, and
+ entirely changed the legal status of the Noblesse. Down to his time the
+ nobles were free to serve or not as they chose, and those who chose to
+ serve enjoyed land on what we should call a feudal tenure. Some served
+ permanently in the military or civil administration, but by far the
+ greater number lived on their estates, and entered the active service
+ merely when the militia was called out in view of war. This system was
+ completely changed when Peter created a large standing army and a great
+ centralised bureaucracy. By one of those "fell swoops" which periodically
+ occur in Russian history, he changed the feudal into freehold tenures, and
+ laid down the principle that all nobles, whatever their landed possessions
+ might be, should serve the State in the army, the fleet, or the civil
+ administration, from boyhood to old age. In accordance with this
+ principle, any noble who refused to serve was not only deprived of his
+ estate, as in the old times, but was declared to be a traitor and might be
+ condemned to capital punishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nobles were thus transformed into servants of the State, and the State
+ in the time of Peter was a hard taskmaster. They complained bitterly, and
+ with reason, that they had been deprived of their ancient rights, and were
+ compelled to accept quietly and uncomplainingly whatever burdens their
+ master chose to place upon them. "Though our country," they said, "is in
+ no danger of invasion, no sooner is peace concluded than plans are laid
+ for a new war, which has generally no other foundation than the ambition
+ of the Sovereign, or perhaps merely the ambition of one of his Ministers.
+ To please him our peasants are utterly exhausted, and we ourselves are
+ forced to leave our homes and families, not as formerly for a single
+ campaign, but for long years. We are compelled to contract debts and to
+ entrust our estates to thieving overseers, who commonly reduce them to
+ such a condition that when we are allowed to retire from the service, in
+ consequence of old age or illness, we cannot to the end of our lives
+ retrieve our prosperity. In a word, we are so exhausted and ruined by the
+ keeping up of a standing army, and by the consequences flowing therefrom,
+ that the most cruel enemy, though he should devastate the whole Empire,
+ could not cause us one-half of the injury."*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * These complaints have been preserved by Vockerodt, a
+ Prussian diplomatic agent of the time.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This Spartan regime, which ruthlessly sacrificed private interests to
+ considerations of State policy, could not long be maintained in its
+ pristine severity. It undermined its own foundations by demanding too
+ much. Draconian laws threatening confiscation and capital punishment were
+ of little avail. Nobles became monks, inscribed themselves as merchants,
+ or engaged themselves as domestic servants, in order to escape their
+ obligations. "Some," says a contemporary, "grow old in disobedience and
+ have never once appeared in active service. . . . There is, for instance,
+ Theodore Mokeyef. . . . In spite of the strict orders sent regarding him
+ no one could ever catch him. Some of those sent to take him he belaboured
+ with blows, and when he could not beat the messengers, he pretended to be
+ dangerously ill, or feigned idiocy, and, running into the pond, stood in
+ the water up to his neck; but as soon as the messengers were out of sight
+ he returned home and roared like a lion." *
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Pososhkof, "O skudosti i bogatstve."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After Peter's death the system was gradually relaxed, but the Noblesse
+ could not be satisfied by partial concessions. Russia had in the meantime
+ moved, as it were, out of Asia into Europe, and had become one of the
+ great European Powers. The upper classes had been gradually learning
+ something of the fashions, the literature, the institutions, and the moral
+ conceptions of Western Europe, and the nobles naturally compared the class
+ to which they belonged with the aristocracies of Germany and France. For
+ those who were influenced by the new foreign ideas the comparison was
+ humiliating. In the West the Noblesse was a free and privileged class,
+ proud of its liberty, its rights, and its culture; whereas in Russia the
+ nobles were servants of the State, without privileges, without dignity,
+ subject to corporal punishment, and burdened with onerous duties from
+ which there was no escape. Thus arose in that section of the Noblesse
+ which had some acquaintance with Western civilisation a feeling of
+ discontent, and a desire to gain a social position similar to that of the
+ nobles in France and Germany. These aspirations were in part realised by
+ Peter III., who in 1762 abolished the principle of obligatory service. His
+ consort, Catherine II., went much farther in the same direction, and
+ inaugurated a new epoch in the history of the Dvoryanstvo, a period in
+ which its duties and obligations fell into the background, and its rights
+ and privileges came to the front.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Catherine had good reason to favour the Noblesse. As a foreigner and a
+ usurper, raised to the throne by a Court conspiracy, she could not awaken
+ in the masses that semi-religious veneration which the legitimate Tsars
+ have always enjoyed, and consequently she had to seek support in the upper
+ classes, who were less rigid and uncompromising in their conceptions of
+ legitimacy. She confirmed, therefore, the ukaz which abolished obligatory
+ service of the nobles, and sought to gain their voluntary service by
+ honours and rewards. In her manifestoes she always spoke of them in the
+ most flattering terms; and tried to convince them that the welfare of the
+ country depended on their loyalty and devotion. Though she had no
+ intention of ceding any of her political power, she formed the nobles of
+ each province into a corporation, with periodical assemblies, which were
+ supposed to resemble the French Provincial Parliaments, and entrusted to
+ each of these corporations a large part of the local administration. By
+ these and similar means, aided by her masculine energy and feminine tact,
+ she made herself very popular, and completely changed the old conceptions
+ about the public service. Formerly service had been looked on as a burden;
+ now it came to be looked on as a privilege. Thousands who had retired to
+ their estates after the publication of the liberation edict now flocked
+ back and sought appointments, and this tendency was greatly increased by
+ the brilliant campaigns against the Turks, which excited the patriotic
+ feelings and gave plentiful opportunities of promotion. "Not only landed
+ proprietors," it is said in a comedy of the time,* "but all men, even
+ shopkeepers and cobblers, aim at becoming officers, and the man who has
+ passed his whole life without official rank seems to be not a human
+ being."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Knyazhnina, "Khvastun."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And Catherine did more than this. She shared the idea&mdash;generally
+ accepted throughout Europe since the brilliant reign of Louis XIV.&mdash;that
+ a refined, pomp-loving, pleasure-seeking Court Noblesse was not only the
+ best bulwark of Monarchy, but also a necessary ornament of every highly
+ civilised State; and as she ardently desired that her country should have
+ the reputation of being highly civilised, she strove to create this
+ national ornament. The love of French civilisation, which already existed
+ among the upper classes of her subjects, here came to her aid, and her
+ efforts in this direction were singularly successful. The Court of St.
+ Petersburg became almost as brilliant, as galant, and as frivolous as the
+ Court of Versailles. All who aimed at high honours adopted French
+ fashions, spoke the French language, and affected an unqualified
+ admiration for French classical literature. The Courtiers talked of the
+ point d'honneur, discussed the question as to what was consistent with the
+ dignity of a noble, sought to display "that chivalrous spirit which
+ constitutes the pride and ornament of France"; and looked back with horror
+ on the humiliating position of their fathers and grandfathers. "Peter the
+ Great," writes one of them, "beat all who surrounded him, without
+ distinction of family or rank; but now, many of us would certainly prefer
+ capital punishment to being beaten or flogged, even though the castigation
+ were applied by the sacred hands of the Lord's Anointed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tone which reigned in the Court circle of St. Petersburg spread
+ gradually towards the lower ranks of the Dvoryanstvo, and it seemed to
+ superficial observers that a very fair imitation of the French Noblesse
+ had been produced; but in reality the copy was very unlike the model. The
+ Russian Dvoryanin easily learned the language and assumed the manners of
+ the French gentilhomme, and succeeded in changing his physical and
+ intellectual exterior; but all those deeper and more delicate parts of
+ human nature which are formed by the accumulated experience of past
+ generations could not be so easily and rapidly changed. The French
+ gentilhomme of the eighteenth century was the direct descendant of the
+ feudal baron, with the fundamental conceptions of his ancestors deeply
+ embedded in his nature. He had not, indeed, the old haughty bearing
+ towards the Sovereign, and his language was tinged with the fashionable
+ democratic philosophy of the time; but he possessed a large intellectual
+ and moral inheritance that had come down to him directly from the palmy
+ days of feudalism&mdash;an inheritance which even the Great Revolution,
+ which was then preparing, could not annihilate. The Russian noble, on the
+ contrary, had received from his ancestors entirely different traditions.
+ His father and grandfather had been conscious of the burdens rather than
+ the privileges of the class to which they belonged. They had considered it
+ no disgrace to receive corporal punishment, and had been jealous of their
+ honour, not as gentlemen or descendants of Boyars, but as Brigadiers,
+ College Assessors, or Privy Counsellors. Their dignity had rested not on
+ the grace of God, but on the will of the Tsar. Under these circumstances
+ even the proudest magnate of Catherine's Court, though he might speak
+ French as fluently as his mother tongue, could not be very deeply
+ penetrated with the conception of noble blood, the sacred character of
+ nobility, and the numerous feudal ideas interwoven with these conceptions.
+ And in adopting the outward forms of a foreign culture the nobles did not,
+ it seems, gain much in true dignity. "The old pride of the nobles has
+ fallen!" exclaims one who had more genuine aristocratic feeling than his
+ fellows.* "There are no longer any honourable families; but merely
+ official rank and personal merits. All seek official rank, and as all
+ cannot render direct services, distinctions are sought by every possible
+ means&mdash;by flattering the Monarch and toadying the important
+ personages." There was considerable truth in this complaint, but the voice
+ of this solitary aristocrat was as of one crying in the wilderness. The
+ whole of the educated classes&mdash;men of old family and parvenus alike&mdash;were,
+ with few exceptions, too much engrossed with place-hunting to attend to
+ such sentimental wailing.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Prince Shtcherbatof.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ If the Russian Noblesse was thus in its new form but a very imperfect
+ imitation of its French model, it was still more unlike the English
+ aristocracy. Notwithstanding the liberal phrases in which Catherine
+ habitually indulged, she never had the least intention of ceding one jot
+ or tittle of her autocratic power, and the Noblesse as a class never
+ obtained even a shadow of political influence. There was no real
+ independence under the new airs of dignity and hauteur. In all their acts
+ and openly expressed opinions the courtiers were guided by the real or
+ supposed wishes of the Sovereign, and much of their political sagacity was
+ employed in endeavouring to discover what would please her. "People never
+ talk politics in the salons," says a contemporary witness,* "not even to
+ praise the Government. Fear has produced habits of prudence, and the
+ Frondeurs of the Capital express their opinions only in the confidence of
+ intimate friendship or in a relationship still more confidential. Those
+ who cannot bear this constraint retire to Moscow, which cannot be called
+ the centre of opposition, for there is no such thing as opposition in a
+ country with an autocratic Government, but which is the capital of the
+ discontented." And even there the discontent did not venture to show
+ itself in the Imperial presence. "In Moscow," says another witness,
+ accustomed to the obsequiousness of Versailles, "you might believe
+ yourself to be among republicans who have just thrown off the yoke of a
+ tyrant, but as soon as the Court arrives you see nothing but abject
+ slaves."**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Segur, long Ambassador of France at the Court of
+ Catherine.
+
+ ** Sabathier de Cabres, "Catherine II. et la Cour de Russie
+ en 1772."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Though thus excluded from direct influence in political affairs the
+ Noblesse might still have acquired a certain political significance in the
+ State, by means of the Provincial Assemblies, and by the part they took in
+ local administration; but in reality they had neither the requisite
+ political experience nor the requisite patience, nor even the desire to
+ pursue such a policy. The majority of the proprietors preferred the
+ chances of promotion in the Imperial service to the tranquil life of a
+ country gentleman; and those who resided permanently on their estates
+ showed indifference or positive antipathy to everything connected with the
+ local administration. What was officially described as "a privilege
+ conferred on the nobles for their fidelity, and for the generous sacrifice
+ of their lives in their country's cause," was regarded by those who
+ enjoyed it as a new kind of obligatory service&mdash;an obligation to
+ supply judges and officers of rural police.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we require any additional proof that the nobles amidst all these
+ changes were still as dependent as ever on the arbitrary will or caprice
+ of the Monarch, we have only to glance at their position in the time of
+ Paul I., the capricious, eccentric, violent son and successor of
+ Catherine. The autobiographical memoirs of the time depict in vivid
+ colours the humiliating position of even the leading men in the State, in
+ constant fear of exciting by act, word, or look the wrath of the
+ Sovereign. As we read these contemporary records we seem to have before us
+ a picture of ancient Rome under the most despotic and capricious of her
+ Emperors. Irritated and embittered before his accession to the throne by
+ the haughty demeanour of his mother's favourites, Paul lost no opportunity
+ of showing his contempt for aristocratic pretensions, and of humiliating
+ those who were supposed to harbour them. "Apprenez, Monsieur," he said
+ angrily on one occasion to Dumouriez, who had accidentally referred to one
+ of the "considerable" personages of the Court, "Apprenez qu'il n'y a pas
+ de considerable ici, que la personne a laquelle je parle et pendant le
+ temps que je lui parle!"*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This saying is often falsely attributed to Nicholas. The
+ anecdote is related by Segur.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ From the time of Catherine down to the accession of Alexander II. in 1855
+ no important change was made in the legal status of the Noblesse, but a
+ gradual change took place in its social character by the continual influx
+ of Western ideas and Western culture. The exclusively French culture in
+ vogue at the Court of Catherine assumed a more cosmopolitan colouring, and
+ permeated downwards till all who had any pretensions to being civilises
+ spoke French with tolerable fluency and possessed at least a superficial
+ acquaintance with the literature of Western Europe. What chiefly
+ distinguished them in the eye of the law from the other classes was the
+ privilege of possessing "inhabited estates"&mdash;that is to say, estates
+ with serfs. By the emancipation of the serfs in 1861 this valuable
+ privilege was abolished, and about one-half of their landed property
+ passed into the hands of the peasantry. By the administrative reforms
+ which have since taken place, any little significance which the provincial
+ corporations may have possessed has been annihilated. Thus at the present
+ day the nobles are on a level with the other classes with regard to the
+ right of possessing landed property and the administration of local
+ affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this rapid sketch the reader will easily perceive that the Russian
+ Noblesse has had a peculiar historical development. In Germany, France,
+ and England the nobles were early formed into a homogeneous organised body
+ by the political conditions in which they were placed. They had to repel
+ the encroaching tendencies of the Monarchy on the one hand, and of the
+ bourgeoisie on the other; and in this long struggle with powerful rivals
+ they instinctively held together and developed a vigorous esprit de corps.
+ New members penetrated into their ranks, but these intruders were so few
+ in number that they were rapidly assimilated without modifying the general
+ character or recognised ideals of the class, and without rudely disturbing
+ the fiction of purity of blood. The class thus assumed more and more the
+ nature of a caste with a peculiar intellectual and moral culture, and
+ stoutly defended its position and privileges till the ever-increasing
+ power of the middle classes undermined its influence. Its fate in
+ different countries has been different. In Germany it clung to its feudal
+ traditions, and still preserves its social exclusiveness. In France it was
+ deprived of its political influence by the Monarchy and crushed by the
+ Revolution. In England it moderated its pretensions, allied itself with
+ the middle classes, created under the disguise of constitutional monarchy
+ an aristocratic republic, and conceded inch by inch, as necessity
+ demanded, a share of its political influence to the ally that had helped
+ it to curb the Royal power. Thus the German baron, the French gentilhomme,
+ and the English nobleman represent three distinct, well-marked types; but
+ amidst all their diversities they have much in common. They have all
+ preserved to a greater or less extent a haughty consciousness of innate
+ inextinguishable superiority over the lower orders, together with a more
+ or less carefully disguised dislike for the class which has been, and
+ still is, an aggressive rival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russian Noblesse has not these characteristics. It was formed out of
+ more heterogeneous materials, and these materials did not spontaneously
+ combine to form an organic whole, but were crushed into a conglomerate
+ mass by the weight of the autocratic power. It never became a
+ semi-independent factor in the State. What rights and privileges it
+ possesses it received from the Monarchy, and consequently it has no
+ deep-rooted jealousy or hatred of the Imperial prerogative. On the other
+ hand, it has never had to struggle with the other social classes, and
+ therefore it harbours towards them no feelings of rivalry or hostility. If
+ we hear a Russian noble speak with indignation of autocracy or with
+ acrimony of the bourgeoisie, we may be sure that these feelings have their
+ source, not in traditional conceptions, but in principles learned from the
+ modern schools of social and political philosophy. The class to which he
+ belongs has undergone so many transformations that it has no hoary
+ traditions or deep-rooted prejudices, and always willingly adapts itself
+ to existing conditions. Indeed, it may be said in general that it looks
+ more to the future than the past, and is ever ready to accept any new
+ ideas that wear the badge of progress. Its freedom from traditions and
+ prejudices makes it singularly susceptible of generous enthusiasm and
+ capable of vigorous spasmodic action, but calm moral courage and tenacity
+ of purpose are not among its prominent attributes. In a word, we find in
+ it neither the peculiar virtues nor the peculiar vices which are
+ engendered and fostered by an atmosphere of political liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However we may explain the fact, there is no doubt that the Russian
+ Noblesse has little or nothing of what we call aristocratic feeling&mdash;little
+ or nothing of that haughty, domineering, exclusive spirit which we are
+ accustomed to associate with the word aristocracy. We find plenty of
+ Russians who are proud of their wealth, of their culture, or of their
+ official position, but we rarely find a Russian who is proud of his birth
+ or imagines that the fact of his having a long pedigree gives him any
+ right to political privileges or social consideration. Hence there is a
+ certain amount of truth in the oft-repeated saying that there is in
+ reality no aristocracy in Russia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly the Noblesse as a whole cannot be called an aristocracy. If the
+ term is to be used at all, it must be applied to a group of families which
+ cluster around the Court and form the highest ranks of the Noblesse. This
+ social aristocracy contains many old families, but its real basis is
+ official rank and general culture rather than pedigree or blood. The
+ feudal conceptions of noble birth, good family, and the like have been
+ adopted by some of its members, but do not form one of its conspicuous
+ features. Though habitually practising a certain exclusiveness, it has
+ none of those characteristics of a caste which we find in the German Adel,
+ and is utterly unable to understand such institutions as Tafelfähigkeit,
+ by which a man who has not a pedigree of a certain length is considered
+ unworthy to sit down at a royal table. It takes rather the English
+ aristocracy as its model, and harbours the secret hope of one day
+ obtaining a social and political position similar to that of the nobility
+ and gentry of England. Though it has no peculiar legal privileges, its
+ actual position in the Administration and at Court gives its members great
+ facilities for advancement in the public service. On the other hand, its
+ semi-bureaucratic character, together with the law and custom of dividing
+ landed property among the children at the death of their parents, deprives
+ it of stability. New men force their way into it by official distinction,
+ whilst many of the old families are compelled by poverty to retire from
+ its ranks. The son of a small proprietor, or even of a parish priest, may
+ rise to the highest offices of State, whilst the descendants of the
+ half-mythical Rurik may descend to the position of peasants. It is said
+ that not very long ago a certain Prince Krapotkin gained his living as a
+ cabman in St. Petersburg!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is evident, then, that this social aristocracy must not be confounded
+ with the titled families. Titles do not possess the same value in Russia
+ as in Western Europe. They are very common&mdash;because the titled
+ families are numerous, and all the children bear the titles of the parents
+ even while the parents are still alive&mdash;and they are by no means
+ always associated with official rank, wealth, social position, or
+ distinction of any kind. There are hundreds of princes and princesses who
+ have not the right to appear at Court, and who would not be admitted into
+ what is called in St. Petersburg la societe, or indeed into refined
+ society in any country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only genuine Russian title is Knyaz, commonly translated "Prince." It
+ is borne by the descendants of Rurik, of the Lithuanian Prince Ghedimin,
+ and of the Tartar Khans and Murzi officially recognised by the Tsars.
+ Besides these, there are fourteen families who have adopted it by Imperial
+ command during the last two centuries. The titles of count and baron are
+ modern importations, beginning with the time of Peter the Great. From
+ Peter and his successors about seventy families have received the title of
+ count and ten that of baron. The latter are all, with two exceptions, of
+ foreign extraction, and are mostly descended from Court bankers.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Besides these, there are of course the German counts and
+ barons of the Baltic Provinces, who are Russian subjects.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There is a very common idea that Russian nobles are as a rule enormously
+ rich. This is a mistake. The majority of them are poor. At the time of the
+ Emancipation, in 1861, there were 100,247 landed proprietors, and of
+ these, more than 41,000 were possessors of less than twenty-one male serfs&mdash;that
+ is to say, were in a condition of poverty. A proprietor who was owner of
+ 500 serfs was not considered as by any means very rich, and yet there were
+ only 3,803 proprietors belonging in that category. There were a few,
+ indeed, whose possessions were enormous. Count Sheremetief, for instance,
+ possessed more than 150,000 male serfs, or in other words more than
+ 300,000 souls; and thirty years ago Count Orloff-Davydof owned
+ considerably more than half a million of acres. The Demidof family derive
+ colossal revenues from their mines, and the Strogonofs have estates which,
+ if put together, would be sufficient in extent to form a good-sized
+ independent State in Western Europe. The very rich families, however, are
+ not numerous. The lavish expenditure in which Russian nobles often indulge
+ indicates too frequently not large fortune, but simply foolish ostentation
+ and reckless improvidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps, after having spoken so much about the past history of the
+ Noblesse, I ought to endeavour to cast its horoscope, or at least to say
+ something of its probable future. Though predictions are always hazardous,
+ it is sometimes possible, by tracing the great lines of history in the
+ past, to follow them for a little distance into the future. If it be
+ allowable to apply this method of prediction in the present matter, I
+ should say that the Russian Dvoryanstvo will assimilate with the other
+ classes, rather than form itself into an exclusive corporation. Hereditary
+ aristocracies may be preserved&mdash;or at least their decomposition may
+ be retarded&mdash;where they happen to exist, but it seems that they can
+ no longer be created. In Western Europe there is a large amount of
+ aristocratic sentiment, both in the nobles and in the people; but it
+ exists in spite of, rather than in consequence of, actual social
+ conditions. It is not a product of modern society, but an heirloom that
+ has come down to us from feudal times, when power, wealth, and culture
+ were in the hands of a privileged few. If there ever was in Russia a
+ period corresponding to the feudal times in Western Europe, it has long
+ since been forgotten. There is very little aristocratic sentiment either
+ in the people or in the nobles, and it is difficult to imagine any source
+ from which it could now be derived. More than this, the nobles do not
+ desire to make such an acquisition. In so far as they have any political
+ aspirations, they aim at securing the political liberty of the people as a
+ whole, and not at acquiring exclusive rights and privileges for their own
+ class.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In that section which I have called a social aristocracy there are a few
+ individuals who desire to gain exclusive political influence for the class
+ to which they belong, but there is very little chance of their succeeding.
+ If their desires were ever by chance realised, we should probably have a
+ repetition of the scene which occurred in 1730. When in that year some of
+ the great families raised the Duchess of Courland to the throne on
+ condition of her ceding part of her power to a supreme council, the lower
+ ranks of the Noblesse compelled her to tear up the constitution which she
+ had signed! Those who dislike the autocratic power dislike the idea of an
+ aristocratic oligarchy infinitely more. Nobles and people alike seem to
+ hold instinctively the creed of the French philosopher, who thought it
+ better to be governed by a lion of good family than by a hundred rats of
+ his own species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the present condition of the Noblesse I shall again have occasion to
+ speak when I come to consider the consequences of the Emancipation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ LANDED PROPRIETORS OF THE OLD SCHOOL
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Russian Hospitality&mdash;A Country-House&mdash;Its Owner Described&mdash;His
+ Life, Past and Present&mdash;Winter Evenings&mdash;Books&mdash;-Connection
+ with the Outer World&mdash;The Crimean War and the Emancipation&mdash;A
+ Drunken, Dissolute Proprietor&mdash;An Old General and his Wife&mdash;"Name
+ Days"&mdash;A Legendary Monster&mdash;A Retired Judge&mdash;A Clever
+ Scribe&mdash;Social Leniency&mdash;Cause of Demoralisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the foreign countries in which I have travelled, Russia certainly
+ bears off the palm in the matter of hospitality. Every spring I found
+ myself in possession of a large number of invitations from landed
+ proprietors in different parts of the country&mdash;far more than I could
+ possibly accept&mdash;and a great part of the summer was generally spent
+ in wandering about from one country-house to another. I have no intention
+ of asking the reader to accompany me in all these expeditions&mdash;for
+ though pleasant in reality, they might be tedious in description&mdash;but
+ I wish to introduce him to some typical examples of the landed
+ proprietors. Among them are to be found nearly all ranks and conditions of
+ men, from the rich magnate, surrounded with the refined luxury of
+ West-European civilisation, to the poor, ill-clad, ignorant owner of a few
+ acres which barely supply him with the necessaries of life. Let us take,
+ first of all, a few specimens from the middle ranks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one of the central provinces, near the bank of a sluggish, meandering
+ stream, stands an irregular group of wooden constructions&mdash;old,
+ unpainted, blackened by time, and surmounted by high, sloping roofs of
+ moss-covered planks. The principal building is a long, one-storied
+ dwelling-house, constructed at right angles to the road. At the front of
+ the house is a spacious, ill-kept yard, and at the back an equally
+ spacious shady garden, in which art carries on a feeble conflict with
+ encroaching nature. At the other side of the yard, and facing the front
+ door&mdash;or rather the front doors, for there are two&mdash;stand the
+ stables, hay-shed, and granary, and near to that end of the house which is
+ farthest from the road are two smaller houses, one of which is the
+ kitchen, and the other the Lyudskaya, or servants' apartments. Beyond
+ these we can perceive, through a single row of lime-trees, another group
+ of time-blackened wooden constructions in a still more dilapidated
+ condition. That is the farmyard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is certainly not much symmetry in the disposition of these
+ buildings, but there is nevertheless a certain order and meaning in the
+ apparent chaos. All the buildings which do not require stoves are built at
+ a considerable distance from the dwelling-house and kitchen, which are
+ more liable to take fire; and the kitchen stands by itself, because the
+ odour of cookery where oil is used is by no means agreeable, even for
+ those whose olfactory nerves are not very sensitive. The plan of the house
+ is likewise not without a certain meaning. The rigorous separation of the
+ sexes, which formed a characteristic trait of old Russian society, has
+ long since disappeared, but its influence may still be traced in houses
+ built on the old model. The house in question is one of these, and
+ consequently it is composed of three sections&mdash;at the one end the
+ male apartments, at the other the female apartments, and in the middle the
+ neutral territory, comprising the dining-room and the salon. This
+ arrangement has its conveniences, and explains the fact that the house has
+ two front doors. At the back is a third door, which opens from the neutral
+ territory into a spacious verandah overlooking the garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here lives, and has lived for many years, Ivan Ivanovitch K&mdash;&mdash;,
+ a gentleman of the old school, and a very worthy man of his kind. If we
+ look at him as he sits in his comfortable armchair, with his capacious
+ dressing-gown hanging loosely about him, we shall be able to read at a
+ glance something of his character. Nature endowed him with large bones and
+ broad shoulders, and evidently intended him to be a man of great muscular
+ power, but he has contrived to frustrate this benevolent intention, and
+ has now more fat than muscle. His close-cropped head is round as a bullet,
+ and his features are massive and heavy, but the heaviness is relieved by
+ an expression of calm contentment and imperturbable good-nature, which
+ occasionally blossoms into a broad grin. His face is one of those on which
+ no amount of histrionic talent could produce a look of care and anxiety,
+ and for this it is not to blame, for such an expression has never been
+ demanded of it. Like other mortals, he sometimes experiences little
+ annoyances, and on such occasions his small grey eyes sparkle and his face
+ becomes suffused with a crimson glow that suggests apoplexy; but
+ ill-fortune has never been able to get sufficiently firm hold of him to
+ make him understand what such words as care and anxiety mean. Of struggle,
+ disappointment, hope, and all the other feelings which give to human life
+ a dramatic interest, he knows little by hearsay and nothing by experience.
+ He has, in fact, always lived outside of that struggle for existence which
+ modern philosophers declare to be the law of nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somewhere about seventy years ago Ivan Ivan'itch was born in the house
+ where he still lives. His first lessons he received from the parish
+ priest, and afterwards he was taught by a deacon's son, who had studied in
+ the ecclesiastical seminary to so little purpose that he was unable to
+ pass the final examination. By both of these teachers he was treated with
+ extreme leniency, and was allowed to learn as little as he chose. His
+ father wished him to study hard, but his mother was afraid that study
+ might injure his health, and accordingly gave him several holidays every
+ week. Under these circumstances his progress was naturally not very rapid,
+ and he was still very slightly acquainted with the elementary rules of
+ arithmetic, when his father one day declared that he was already eighteen
+ years of age, and must at once enter the service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what kind of service? Ivan had no natural inclination for any kind of
+ activity. The project of entering him as a Junker in a cavalry regiment,
+ the colonel of which was an old friend of the family, did not at all
+ please him. He had no love for military service, and positively disliked
+ the prospect of an examination. Whilst seeming, therefore, to bow
+ implicitly to the paternal authority, he induced his mother to oppose the
+ scheme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dilemma in which Ivan found himself was this: in deference to his
+ father he wished to be in the service and gain that official rank which
+ every Russian noble desires to possess, and at the same time, in deference
+ to his mother and his own tastes, he wished to remain at home and continue
+ his indolent mode of life. The Marshal of the Noblesse, who happened to
+ call one day, helped him out of the difficulty by offering to inscribe him
+ as secretary in the Dvoryanskaya Opeka, a bureau which acts as curator for
+ the estates of minors. All the duties of this office could be fulfilled by
+ a paid secretary, and the nominal occupant would be periodically promoted
+ as if he were an active official. This was precisely what Ivan required.
+ He accepted eagerly the proposal, and obtained, in the course of seven
+ years, without any effort on his part, the rank of "collegiate secretary,"
+ corresponding to the "capitaine-en-second" of the military hierarchy. To
+ mount higher he would have had to seek some place where he could not have
+ fulfilled his duty by proxy, so he determined to rest on his laurels, and
+ sent in his resignation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Immediately after the termination of his official life his married life
+ began. Before his resignation had been accepted he suddenly found himself
+ one morning on the high road to matrimony. Here again there was no effort
+ on his part. The course of true love, which is said never to run smooth
+ for ordinary mortals, ran smooth for him. He never had even the trouble of
+ proposing. The whole affair was arranged by his parents, who chose as
+ bride for their son the only daughter of their nearest neighbour. The
+ young lady was only about sixteen years of age, and was not remarkable for
+ beauty, talent, or any other peculiarity, but she had one very important
+ qualification&mdash;she was the daughter of a man who had an estate
+ contiguous to their own, and who might give as a dowry a certain bit of
+ land which they had long desired to add to their own property. The
+ negotiations, being of a delicate nature, were entrusted to an old lady
+ who had a great reputation for diplomatic skill in such matters, and she
+ accomplished her mission with such success that in the course of a few
+ weeks the preliminaries were arranged and the day fixed for the wedding.
+ Thus Ivan Ivan'itch won his bride as easily as he had won his tchin of
+ "collegiate secretary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though the bridegroom had received rather than taken to himself a wife,
+ and did not imagine for a moment that he was in love, he had no reason to
+ regret the choice that was made for him. Maria Petrovna was exactly suited
+ by character and education to be the wife of a man like Ivan Ivan'itch.
+ She had grown up at home in the society of nurses and servant-maids, and
+ had never learned anything more than could be obtained from the parish
+ priest and from "Ma'mselle," a personage occupying a position midway
+ between a servant-maid and a governess. The first events of her life were
+ the announcement that she was to be married and the preparations for the
+ wedding. She still remembers the delight which the purchase of her
+ trousseau afforded her, and keeps in her memory a full catalogue of the
+ articles bought. The first years of her married life were not very happy,
+ for she was treated by her mother-in-law as a naughty child who required
+ to be frequently snubbed and lectured; but she bore the discipline with
+ exemplary patience, and in due time became her own mistress and autocratic
+ ruler in all domestic affairs. From that time she has lived an active,
+ uneventful life. Between her and her husband there is as much mutual
+ attachment as can reasonably be expected in phlegmatic natures after half
+ a century of matrimony. She has always devoted her energies to satisfying
+ his simple material wants&mdash;of intellectual wants he has none&mdash;and
+ securing his comfort in every possible way. Under this fostering care he
+ "effeminated himself" (obabilsya), as he is wont to say. His love of
+ shooting died out, he cared less and less to visit his neighbours, and
+ each successive year he spent more and more time in his comfortable
+ arm-chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The daily life of this worthy couple is singularly regular and monotonous,
+ varying only with the changing seasons. In summer Ivan Ivan'itch gets up
+ about seven o'clock, and puts on, with the assistance of his valet de
+ chambre, a simple costume, consisting chiefly of a faded, plentifully
+ stained dressing-gown. Having nothing particular to do, he sits down at
+ the open window and looks into the yard. As the servants pass he stops and
+ questions them, and then gives them orders, or scolds them, as
+ circumstances demand. Towards nine o'clock tea is announced, and he goes
+ into the dining-room&mdash;a long, narrow apartment with bare wooden floor
+ and no furniture but a table and chairs, all in a more or less rickety
+ condition. Here he finds his wife with the tea-urn before her. In a few
+ minutes the grandchildren come in, kiss their grandpapa's hand, and take
+ their places round the table. As this morning meal consists merely of
+ bread and tea, it does not last long; and all disperse to their several
+ occupations. The head of the house begins the labours of the day by
+ resuming his seat at the open window. When he has smoked some cigarettes
+ and indulged in a proportionate amount of silent contemplation, he goes
+ out with the intention of visiting the stables and farmyard, but generally
+ before he has crossed the court he finds the heat unbearable, and returns
+ to his former position by the open window. Here he sits tranquilly till
+ the sun has so far moved round that the verandah at the back of the house
+ is completely in the shade, when he has his arm-chair removed thither, and
+ sits there till dinner-time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maria Petrovna spends her morning in a more active way. As soon as the
+ breakfast table has been cleared she goes to the larder, takes stock of
+ the provisions, arranges the menu du jour, and gives to the cook the
+ necessary materials, with detailed instructions as to how they are to be
+ prepared. The rest of the morning she devotes to her other household
+ duties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards one o'clock dinner is announced, and Ivan Ivan'itch prepares his
+ appetite by swallowing at a gulp a wineglassful of home-made bitters.
+ Dinner is the great event of the day. The food is abundant and of good
+ quality, but mushrooms, onions, and fat play a rather too important part
+ in the repast, and the whole is prepared with very little attention to the
+ recognised principles of culinary hygiene. Many of the dishes, indeed,
+ would make a British valetudinarian stand aghast, but they seem to produce
+ no bad effect on those Russian organisms which have never been weakened by
+ town life, nervous excitement, or intellectual exertion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner has the last dish been removed than a deathlike stillness falls
+ upon the house: it is the time of the after-dinner siesta. The young folks
+ go into the garden, and all the other members of the household give way to
+ the drowsiness naturally engendered by a heavy meal on a hot summer day.
+ Ivan Ivan'itch retires to his own room, from which the flies have been
+ carefully expelled. Maria Petrovna dozes in an arm-chair in the
+ sitting-room, with a pocket-handkerchief spread over her face. The
+ servants snore in the corridors, the garret, or the hay-shed; and even the
+ old watch-dog in the corner of the yard stretches himself out at full
+ length on the shady side of his kennel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In about two hours the house gradually re-awakens. Doors begin to creak;
+ the names of various servants are bawled out in all tones, from bass to
+ falsetto; and footsteps are heard in the yard. Soon a man-servant issues
+ from the kitchen bearing an enormous tea-urn, which puffs like a little
+ steam-engine. The family assembles for tea. In Russia, as elsewhere, sleep
+ after a heavy meal produces thirst, so that the tea and other beverages
+ are very acceptable. Then some little delicacies are served&mdash;such as
+ fruit and wild berries, or cucumbers with honey, or something else of the
+ kind, and the family again disperses. Ivan Ivan'itch takes a turn in the
+ fields on his begovuiya droshki&mdash;an extremely light vehicle composed
+ of two pairs of wheels joined together by a single board, on which the
+ driver sits stride-legged; and Maria Petrovna probably receives a visit
+ from the Popadya (the priest's wife), who is the chief gossipmonger of the
+ neighbourhood. There is not much scandal in the district, but what little
+ there is the Popadya carefully collects, and distributes among her
+ acquaintances with undiscriminating generosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the evening it often happens that a little group of peasants come into
+ the court, and ask to see the "master." The master goes to the door, and
+ generally finds that they have some favour to request. In reply to his
+ question, "Well, children, what do you want?" they tell their story in a
+ confused, rambling way, several of them speaking at a time, and he has to
+ question and cross-question them before he comes to understand clearly
+ what they desire. If he tells them he cannot grant it, they probably do
+ not accept a first refusal, but endeavour by means of supplication to make
+ him reconsider his decision. Stepping forward a little, and bowing low,
+ one of the group begins in a half-respectful, half-familiar, caressing
+ tone: "Little Father, Ivan Ivan'itch, be gracious; you are our father, and
+ we are your children"&mdash;and so on. Ivan Ivan'itch good-naturedly
+ listens, and again explains that he cannot grant what they ask; but they
+ have still hopes of gaining their point by entreaty, and continue their
+ supplications till at last his patience is exhausted and he says to them
+ in a paternal tone, "Now, enough! enough! you are blockheads&mdash;blockheads
+ all round! There's no use talking; it can't be done." And with these words
+ he enters the house, so as to prevent all further discussion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A regular part of the evening's occupation is the interview with the
+ steward. The work that has just been done, and the programme for the
+ morrow, are always discussed at great length; and much time is spent in
+ speculating as to the weather during the next few days. On this latter
+ point the calendar is always carefully consulted, and great confidence is
+ placed in its predictions, though past experience has often shown that
+ they are not to be implicitly trusted. The conversation drags on till
+ supper is announced, and immediately after that meal, which is an abridged
+ repetition of dinner, all retire for the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus pass the days and weeks and months in the house of Ivan Ivan'itch,
+ and rarely is there any deviation from the ordinary programme. The climate
+ necessitates, of course, some slight modifications. When it is cold, the
+ doors and windows have to be kept shut, and after heavy rains those who do
+ not like to wade in mud have to remain in the house or garden. In the long
+ winter evenings the family assembles in the sitting-room, and all kill
+ time as best they can. Ivan Ivan'itch smokes and meditates or listens to
+ the barrel-organ played by one of the children. Maria Petrovna knits a
+ stocking. The old aunt, who commonly spends the winter with them, plays
+ Patience, and sometimes draws from the game conclusions as to the future.
+ Her favourite predictions are that a stranger will arrive, or that a
+ marriage will take place, and she can determine the sex of the stranger
+ and the colour of the bridegroom's hair; but beyond this her art does not
+ go, and she cannot satisfy the young ladies' curiosity as to further
+ details.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Books and newspapers are rarely seen in the sitting-room, but for those
+ who wish to read there is a book-case full of miscellaneous literature,
+ which gives some idea of the literary tastes of the family during several
+ generations. The oldest volumes were bought by Ivan Ivan'itch's
+ grandfather&mdash;a man who, according to the family traditions, enjoyed
+ the confidence of the great Catherine. Though wholly overlooked by recent
+ historians, he was evidently a man who had some pretensions to culture. He
+ had his portrait painted by a foreign artist of considerable talent&mdash;it
+ still hangs in the sitting-room&mdash;and he bought several pieces of
+ Sevres ware, the last of which stands on a commode in the corner and
+ contrasts strangely with the rude home-made furniture and squalid
+ appearance of the apartment. Among the books which bear his name are the
+ tragedies of Sumarokof, who imagined himself to be "the Russian Voltaire";
+ the amusing comedies of Von-Wisin, some of which still keep the stage; the
+ loud-sounding odes of the courtly Derzhavin; two or three books containing
+ the mystic wisdom of Freemasonry as interpreted by Schwarz and Novikoff;
+ Russian translations of Richardson's "Pamela," "Sir Charles Grandison,"
+ and "Clarissa Harlowe"; Rousseau's "Nouvelle Heloise," in Russian garb;
+ and three or four volumes of Voltaire in the original. Among the works
+ collected at a somewhat later period are translations of Ann Radcliffe, of
+ Scott's early novels, and of Ducray Dumenil, whose stories, "Lolotte et
+ Fanfan" and "Victor," once enjoyed a great reputation. At this point the
+ literary tastes of the family appear to have died out, for the succeeding
+ literature is represented exclusively by Kryloff's Fables, a farmer's
+ manual, a handbook of family medicine, and a series of calendars. There
+ are, however, some signs of a revival, for on the lowest shelf stand
+ recent editions of Pushkin, Lermontof, and Gogol, and a few works by
+ living authors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes the monotony of the winter is broken by visiting neighbours and
+ receiving visitors in return, or in a more decided way by a visit of a few
+ days to the capital of the province. In the latter case Maria Petrovna
+ spends nearly all her time in shopping, and brings home a large collection
+ of miscellaneous articles. The inspection of these by the assembled family
+ forms an important domestic event, which completely throws into the shade
+ the occasional visits of peddlers and colporteurs. Then there are the
+ festivities at Christmas and Easter, and occasionally little incidents of
+ less agreeable kind. It may be that there is a heavy fall of snow, so that
+ it is necessary to cut roads to the kitchen and stables; or wolves enter
+ the courtyard at night and have a fight with the watch-dogs; or the news
+ is brought that a peasant who had been drinking in a neighbouring village
+ has been found frozen to death on the road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Altogether the family live a very isolated life, but they have one bond of
+ connection with the great outer world. Two of the sons are officers in the
+ army and both of them write home occasionally to their mother and sisters.
+ To these two youths is devoted all the little stock of sentimentality
+ which Maria Petrovna possesses. She can talk of them by the hour to any
+ one who will listen to her, and has related to the Popadya a hundred times
+ every trivial incident of their lives. Though they have never given her
+ much cause for anxiety, and they are now men of middle age, she lives in
+ constant fear that some evil may befall them. What she most fears is that
+ they may be sent on a campaign or may fall in love with actresses. War and
+ actresses are, in fact, the two bug-bears of her existence, and whenever
+ she has a disquieting dream she asks the priest to offer up a moleben for
+ the safety of her absent ones. Sometimes she ventures to express her
+ anxiety to her husband, and recommends him to write to them; but he
+ considers writing a letter a very serious bit of work, and always replies
+ evasively, "Well, well, we must think about it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the Crimean War Ivan Ivan'itch half awoke from his habitual
+ lethargy, and read occasionally the meagre official reports published by
+ the Government. He was a little surprised that no great victories were
+ reported, and that the army did not at once advance on Constantinople. As
+ to causes he never speculated. Some of his neighbours told him that the
+ army was disorganised, and the whole system of Nicholas had been proved to
+ be utterly worthless. That might all be very true, but he did not
+ understand military and political matters. No doubt it would all come
+ right in the end. All did come right, after a fashion, and he again gave
+ up reading newspapers; but ere long he was startled by reports much more
+ alarming than any rumours of war. People began to talk about the peasant
+ question, and to say openly that the serfs must soon be emancipated. For
+ once in his life Ivan Ivan'itch asked explanations. Finding one of his
+ neighbours, who had always been a respectable, sensible man, and a severe
+ disciplinarian, talking in this way, he took him aside and asked what it
+ all meant. The neighbour explained that the old order of things had shown
+ itself bankrupt and was doomed, that a new epoch was opening, that
+ everything was to be reformed, and that the Emperor, in accordance with a
+ secret clause of the Treaty with the Allies, was about to grant a
+ Constitution! Ivan Ivan'itch listened for a little in silence, and then,
+ with a gesture of impatience, interrupted the speaker: "Polno
+ duratchitsya! enough of fun and tomfoolery. Vassili Petrovitch, tell me
+ seriously what you mean."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Vassili Petrovitch vowed that he spoke in all seriousness, his friend
+ gazed at him with a look of intense compassion, and remarked, as he turned
+ away, "So you, too, have gone out of your mind!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The utterances of Vassili Petrovitch, which his lethargic, sober-minded
+ friend regarded as indicating temporary insanity in the speaker,
+ represented fairly the mental condition of very many Russian nobles at
+ that time, and were not without a certain foundation. The idea about a
+ secret clause in the Treaty of Paris was purely imaginary, but it was
+ quite true that the country was entering on an epoch of great reforms,
+ among which the Emancipation question occupied the chief place. Of this
+ even the sceptical Ivan Ivan'itch was soon convinced. The Emperor formally
+ declared to the Noblesse of the province of Moscow that the actual state
+ of things could not continue forever, and called on the landed proprietors
+ to consider by what means the condition of their serfs might be
+ ameliorated. Provincial committees were formed for the purpose of
+ preparing definite projects, and gradually it became apparent that the
+ emancipation of the serfs was really at hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ivan Ivan'itch was alarmed at the prospect of losing his authority over
+ his serfs. Though he had never been a cruel taskmaster, he had not spared
+ the rod when he considered it necessary, and he believed birch twigs to be
+ a necessary instrument in the Russian system of agriculture. For some time
+ he drew consolation from the thought that peasants were not birds of the
+ air, that they must under all circumstances require food and clothing, and
+ that they would be ready to serve him as agricultural labourers; but when
+ he learned that they were to receive a large part of the estate for their
+ own use, his hopes fell, and he greatly feared that he would be inevitably
+ ruined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These dark forebodings have not been by any means realised. His serfs were
+ emancipated and received about a half of the estate, but in return for the
+ land ceded they paid him annually a considerable sum, and they were always
+ ready to cultivate his fields for a fair remuneration. The yearly outlay
+ was considerably greater, but the price of grain rose, and this
+ counterbalanced the additional yearly expenditure. The administration of
+ the estate has become much less patriarchal; much that was formerly left
+ to custom and tacit understanding is now regulated by express agreement on
+ purely commercial principles; a great deal more money is paid out and a
+ great deal more received; there is much less authority in the hands of the
+ master, and his responsibilities are proportionately diminished; but in
+ spite of all these changes, Ivan Ivan'itch would have great difficulty in
+ deciding whether he is a richer or a poorer man. He has fewer horses and
+ fewer servants, but he has still more than he requires, and his mode of
+ life has undergone no perceptible alteration. Maria Petrovna complains
+ that she is no longer supplied with eggs, chickens, and homespun linen by
+ the peasants, and that everything is three times as dear as it used to be;
+ but somehow the larder is still full, and abundance reigns in the house as
+ of old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ivan Ivan'itch certainly does not possess transcendent qualities of any
+ kind. It would be impossible to make a hero out of him, even though his
+ own son should be his biographer. Muscular Christians may reasonably
+ despise him, an active, energetic man may fairly condemn him for his
+ indolence and apathy. But, on the other hand, he has no very bad
+ qualities. His vices are of the passive, negative kind. He is a
+ respectable if not a distinguished member of society, and appears a very
+ worthy man when compared with many of his neighbours who have been brought
+ up in similar conditions. Take, for instance, his younger brother Dimitri,
+ who lives a short way off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dimitri Ivanovitch, like his brother Ivan, had been endowed by nature with
+ a very decided repugnance to prolonged intellectual exertion, but as he
+ was a man of good parts he did not fear a Junker's examination&mdash;especially
+ when he could count on the colonel's protection&mdash;and accordingly
+ entered the army. In his regiment were a number of jovial young officers
+ like himself, always ready to relieve the monotony of garrison life by
+ boisterous dissipation, and among these he easily acquired the reputation
+ of being a thoroughly good fellow. In drinking bouts he could hold his own
+ with the best of them, and in all mad pranks invariably played the chief
+ part. By this means he endeared himself to his comrades, and for a time
+ all went well. The colonel had himself sown wild oats plentifully in his
+ youth, and was quite disposed to overlook, as far as possible, the
+ bacchanalian peccadilloes of his subordinates. But before many years had
+ passed, the regiment suddenly changed its character. Certain rumours had
+ reached headquarters, and the Emperor Nicholas appointed as colonel a
+ stern disciplinarian of German origin, who aimed at making the regiment a
+ kind of machine that should work with the accuracy of a chronometer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This change did not at all suit the tastes of Dimitri Ivan'itch. He chafed
+ under the new restraints, and as soon as he had gained the rank of
+ lieutenant retired from the service to enjoy the freedom of country life.
+ Shortly afterwards his father died, and he thereby became owner of an
+ estate, with two hundred serfs. He did not, like his elder brother, marry,
+ and "effeminate himself," but he did worse. In his little independent
+ kingdom&mdash;for such was practically a Russian estate in the good old
+ times&mdash;he was lord of all he surveyed, and gave full scope to his
+ boisterous humour, his passion for sport, and his love of drinking and
+ dissipation. Many of the mad pranks in which he indulged will long be
+ preserved by popular tradition, but they cannot well be related here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dimitri Ivan'itch is now a man long past middle age, and still continues
+ his wild, dissipated life. His house resembles an ill-kept, disreputable
+ tavern. The floor is filthy, the furniture chipped and broken, the
+ servants indolent, slovenly, and in rags. Dogs of all breeds and sizes
+ roam about the rooms and corridors. The master, when not asleep, is always
+ in a more or less complete state of intoxication. Generally he has one or
+ two guests staying with him&mdash;men of the same type as himself&mdash;and
+ days and nights are spent in drinking and card-playing. When he cannot
+ have his usual boon-companions he sends for one or two small proprietors
+ who live near&mdash;men who are legally nobles, but who are so poor that
+ they differ little from peasants. Formerly, when ordinary resources
+ failed, he occasionally had recourse to the violent expedient of ordering
+ his servants to stop the first passing travellers, whoever they might be,
+ and bring them in by persuasion or force, as circumstances might demand.
+ If the travellers refused to accept such rough, undesired hospitality, a
+ wheel would be taken off their tarantass, or some indispensable part of
+ the harness would be secreted, and they might consider themselves
+ fortunate if they succeeded in getting away next morning.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This custom has fortunately gone out of fashion even in
+ outlying districts, but an incident of the kind happened to
+ a friend of mine as late as 1871. He was detained against
+ his will for two whole days by a man whom he had never seen
+ before, and at last effected his escape by bribing the
+ servants of his tyrannical host.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the time of serfage the domestic serfs had much to bear from their
+ capricious, violent master. They lived in an atmosphere of abusive
+ language, and were subjected not unfrequently to corporal punishment.
+ Worse than this, their master was constantly threatening to "shave their
+ forehead"&mdash;that is to say, to give them as recruits&mdash;and
+ occasionally he put his threat into execution, in spite of the wailings
+ and entreaties of the culprit and his relations. And yet, strange to say,
+ nearly all of them remained with him as free servants after the
+ Emancipation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In justice to the Russian landed proprietors, I must say that the class
+ represented by Dimitri Ivan'itch has now almost disappeared. It was the
+ natural result of serfage and social stagnation&mdash;of a state of
+ society in which there were few legal and moral restraints, and few
+ inducements to honourable activity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the other landed proprietors of the district, one of the best known
+ is Nicolai Petrovitch B&mdash;&mdash;, an old military man with the rank
+ of general. Like Ivan Ivan'itch, he belongs to the old school; but the two
+ men must be contrasted rather than compared. The difference in their lives
+ and characters is reflected in their outward appearance. Ivan Ivan'itch,
+ as we know, is portly in form and heavy in all his movements, and loves to
+ loll in his arm-chair or to loaf about the house in a capacious
+ dressing-gown. The General, on the contrary, is thin, wiry, and muscular,
+ wears habitually a close-buttoned military tunic, and always has a stern
+ expression, the force of which is considerably augmented by a bristly
+ moustache resembling a shoe-brush. As he paces up and down the room,
+ knitting his brows and gazing at the floor, he looks as if he were forming
+ combinations of the first magnitude; but those who know him well are aware
+ that this is an optical delusion, of which he is himself to some extent a
+ victim. He is quite innocent of deep thought and concentrated intellectual
+ effort. Though he frowns so fiercely he is by no means of a naturally
+ ferocious temperament. Had he passed all his life in the country he would
+ probably have been as good-natured and phlegmatic as Ivan Ivan'itch
+ himself, but, unlike that worshipper of tranquillity, he had aspired to
+ rise in the service, and had adopted the stern, formal bearing which the
+ Emperor Nicholas considered indispensable in an officer. The manner which
+ he had at first put on as part of his uniform became by the force of habit
+ almost a part of his nature, and at the age of thirty he was a stern
+ disciplinarian and uncompromising formalist, who confined his attention
+ exclusively to drill and other military duties. Thus he rose steadily by
+ his own merit, and reached the goal of his early ambition&mdash;the rank
+ of general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as this point was reached he determined to leave the service and
+ retire to his property. Many considerations urged him to take this step.
+ He enjoyed the title of Excellency which he had long coveted, and when he
+ put on his full uniform his breast was bespangled with medals and
+ decorations. Since the death of his father the revenues of his estate had
+ been steadily decreasing, and report said that the best wood in his forest
+ was rapidly disappearing. His wife had no love for the country, and would
+ have preferred to settle in Moscow or St. Petersburg, but they found that
+ with their small income they could not live in a large town in a style
+ suitable to their rank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The General determined to introduce order into his estate, and become a
+ practical farmer; but a little experience convinced him that his new
+ functions were much more difficult than the commanding of a regiment. He
+ has long since given over the practical management of the property to a
+ steward, and he contents himself with exercising what he imagines to be an
+ efficient control. Though he wishes to do much, he finds small scope for
+ his activity, and spends his days in pretty much the same way as Ivan
+ Ivan'itch, with this difference, that he plays cards whenever he gets an
+ opportunity, and reads regularly the Moscow Gazette and Russki Invalid,
+ the official military paper. What specially interests him is the list of
+ promotions, retirements, and Imperial rewards for merit and seniority.
+ When he sees the announcement that some old comrade has been made an
+ officer of his Majesty's suite or has received a grand cordon, he frowns a
+ little more than usual, and is tempted to regret that he retired from the
+ service. Had he waited patiently, perhaps a bit of good fortune might have
+ fallen likewise to his lot. This idea takes possession of him, and during
+ the remainder of the day he is taciturn and morose. His wife notices the
+ change, and knows the reason of it, but has too much good sense and tact
+ to make any allusion to the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anna Alexandrovna&mdash;as the good lady is called&mdash;is an elderly
+ dame who does not at all resemble the wife of Ivan Ivan'itch. She was long
+ accustomed to a numerous military society, with dinner-parties, dancing,
+ promenades, card-playing, and all the other amusements of garrison life,
+ and she never contracted a taste for domestic concerns. Her knowledge of
+ culinary affairs is extremely vague, and she has no idea of how to make
+ preserves, nalivka, and other home-made delicacies, though Maria Petrovna,
+ who is universally acknowledged to be a great adept in such matters, has
+ proposed a hundred times to give her some choice recipes. In short,
+ domestic affairs are a burden to her, and she entrusts them as far as
+ possible to the housekeeper. Altogether she finds country life very
+ tiresome, but, possessing that placid, philosophical temperament which
+ seems to have some casual connection with corpulence, she submits without
+ murmuring, and tries to lighten a little the unavoidable monotony by
+ paying visits and receiving visitors. The neighbours within a radius of
+ twenty miles are, with few exceptions, more or less of the Ivan Ivan'itch
+ and Maria Petrovna type&mdash;decidedly rustic in their manners and
+ conceptions; but their company is better than absolute solitude, and they
+ have at least the good quality of being always able and willing to play
+ cards for any number of hours. Besides this, Anna Alexandrovna has the
+ satisfaction of feeling that amongst them she is almost a great personage,
+ and unquestionably an authority in all matters of taste and fashion; and
+ she feels specially well disposed towards those of them who frequently
+ address her as "Your Excellency."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief festivities take place on the "name-days" of the General and his
+ spouse&mdash;that is to say, the days sacred to St. Nicholas and St. Anna.
+ On these occasions all the neighbours come to offer their congratulations,
+ and remain to dinner as a matter of course. After dinner the older
+ visitors sit down to cards, and the young people extemporise a dance. The
+ fete is specially successful when the eldest son comes home to take part
+ in it, and brings a brother officer with him. He is now a general like his
+ father.* In days gone by one of his comrades was expected to offer his
+ hand to Olga Nekola'vna, the second daughter, a delicate young lady who
+ had been educated in one of the great Instituts&mdash;gigantic
+ boarding-schools, founded and kept up by the Government, for the daughters
+ of those who are supposed to have deserved well of their country.
+ Unfortunately the expected offer was never made, and she and her sister
+ live at home as old maids, bewailing the absence of "civilised" society,
+ and killing time in a harmless, elegant way by means of music, needlework,
+ and light literature.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Generals are much more common in Russia than in other
+ countries. A few years ago there was an old lady in Moscow
+ who had a family of ten sons, all of whom were generals!
+ The rank may be obtained in the civil as well as the
+ military service.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At these "name-day" gatherings one used to meet still more interesting
+ specimens of the old school. One of them I remember particularly. He was a
+ tall, corpulent old man, in a threadbare frock-coat, which wrinkled up
+ about his waist. His shaggy eyebrows almost covered his small, dull eyes,
+ his heavy moustache partially concealed a large mouth strongly indicating
+ sensuous tendencies. His hair was cut so short that it was difficult to
+ say what its colour would be if it were allowed to grow. He always arrived
+ in his tarantass just in time for the zakuska&mdash;the appetising
+ collation that is served shortly before dinner&mdash;grunted out a few
+ congratulations to the host and hostess and monosyllabic greetings to his
+ acquaintances, ate a copious meal, and immediately afterwards placed
+ himself at a card-table, where he sat in silence as long as he could get
+ any one to play with him. People did not like, however, to play with
+ Andrei Vassil'itch, for his society was not agreeable, and he always
+ contrived to go home with a well-filled purse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Andrei Vassil'itch was a noted man in the neighbourhood. He was the centre
+ of a whole cycle of legends, and I have often heard that his name was used
+ with effect by nurses to frighten naughty children. I never missed an
+ opportunity of meeting him, for I was curious to see and study a legendary
+ monster in the flesh. How far the numerous stories told about him were
+ true I cannot pretend to say, but they were certainly not without
+ foundation. In his youth he had served for some time in the army, and was
+ celebrated, even in an age when martinets had always a good chance of
+ promotion, for his brutality to his subordinates. His career was cut
+ short, however, when he had only the rank of captain. Having compromised
+ himself in some way, he found it advisable to send in his resignation and
+ retire to his estate. Here he organised his house on Mahometan rather than
+ Christian principles, and ruled his servants and peasants as he had been
+ accustomed to rule his soldiers&mdash;using corporal punishment in
+ merciless fashion. His wife did not venture to protest against the
+ Mahometan arrangements, and any peasant who stood in the way of their
+ realisation was at once given as a recruit, or transported to Siberia, in
+ accordance with his master's demand.* At last his tyranny and extortion
+ drove his serfs to revolt. One night his house was surrounded and set on
+ fire, but he contrived to escape the fate that was prepared for him, and
+ caused all who had taken part in the revolt to be mercilessly punished.
+ This was a severe lesson, but it had no effect upon him. Taking
+ precautions against a similar surprise, he continued to tyrannise and
+ extort as before, until in 1861 the serfs were emancipated, and his
+ authority came to an end.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * When a proprietor considered any of his serfs unruly he
+ could, according to law, have them transported to Siberia
+ without trial, on condition of paying the expenses of
+ transport. Arrived at their destination, they received
+ land, and lived as free colonists, with the single
+ restriction that they were not allowed to leave the locality
+ where they settled.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A very different sort of man was Pavel Trophim'itch, who likewise came
+ regularly to pay his respects and present his congratulations to the
+ General and "Gheneralsha."* It was pleasant to turn from the hard,
+ wrinkled, morose features of the legendary monster to the soft, smooth,
+ jovial face of this man, who had been accustomed to look at the bright
+ side of things, till his face had caught something of their brightness. "A
+ good, jovial, honest face!" a stranger might exclaim as he looked at him.
+ Knowing something of his character and history, I could not endorse such
+ an opinion. Jovial he certainly was, for few men were more capable of
+ making and enjoying mirth. Good he might be also called, if the word were
+ taken in the sense of good-natured, for he never took offence, and was
+ always ready to do a kindly action if it did not cost him any trouble. But
+ as to his honesty, that required some qualification. Wholly untarnished
+ his reputation certainly could not be, for he had been a judge in the
+ District Court before the time of the judicial reforms; and, not being a
+ Cato, he had succumbed to the usual temptations. He had never studied law,
+ and made no pretensions to the possession of great legal knowledge. To all
+ who would listen to him he declared openly that he knew much more about
+ pointers and setters than about legal formalities. But his estate was very
+ small, and he could not afford to give up his appointment.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The female form of the word General.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Of these unreformed Courts, which are happily among the things of the
+ past, I shall have occasion to speak in the sequel. For the present I wish
+ merely to say that they were thoroughly corrupt, and I hasten to add that
+ Pavel Trophim'itch was by no means a judge of the worst kind. He had been
+ known to protect widows and orphans against those who wished to despoil
+ them, and no amount of money would induce him to give an unjust decision
+ against a friend who had privately explained the case to him; but when he
+ knew nothing of the case or of the parties he readily signed the decision
+ prepared by the secretary, and quietly pocketed the proceeds, without
+ feeling any very disagreeable twinges of conscience. All judges, he knew,
+ did likewise, and he had no pretension to being better than his fellows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Pavel Trophim'itch played cards at the General's house or elsewhere,
+ a small, awkward, clean-shaven man, with dark eyes and a Tartar cast of
+ countenance, might generally be seen sitting at the same table. His name
+ was Alexei Petrovitch T&mdash;&mdash;. Whether he really had any Tartar
+ blood in him it is impossible to say, but certainly his ancestors for one
+ or two generations were all good orthodox Christians. His father had been
+ a poor military surgeon in a marching regiment, and he himself had become
+ at an early age a scribe in one of the bureaux of the district town. He
+ was then very poor, and had great difficulty in supporting life on the
+ miserable pittance which he received as a salary; but he was a sharp,
+ clever youth, and soon discovered that even a scribe had a great many
+ opportunities of extorting money from the ignorant public.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These opportunities Alexei Petrovitch used with great ability, and became
+ known as one of the most accomplished bribe-takers (vzyatotchniki) in the
+ district. His position, however, was so very subordinate that he would
+ never have become rich had he not fallen upon a very ingenious expedient
+ which completely succeeded. Hearing that a small proprietor, who had an
+ only daughter, had come to live in the town for a few weeks, he took a
+ room in the inn where the newcomers lived, and when he had made their
+ acquaintance he fell dangerously ill. Feeling his last hours approaching,
+ he sent for a priest, confided to him that he had amassed a large fortune,
+ and requested that a will should be drawn up. In the will he bequeathed
+ large sums to all his relations, and a considerable sum to the parish
+ church. The whole affair was to be kept a secret till after his death, but
+ his neighbour&mdash;the old gentleman with the daughter&mdash;was called
+ in to act as a witness. When all this had been done he did not die, but
+ rapidly recovered, and now induced the old gentleman to whom he had
+ confided his secret to grant him his daughter's hand. The daughter had no
+ objections to marry a man possessed of such wealth, and the marriage was
+ duly celebrated. Shortly after this the father died&mdash;without
+ discovering, it is to be hoped, the hoax that had been perpetrated&mdash;and
+ Alexei Petrovitch became virtual possessor of a very comfortable little
+ estate. With the change in his fortunes he completely changed his
+ principles, or at least his practice. In all his dealings he was strictly
+ honest. He lent money, it is true, at from ten to fifteen per cent., but
+ that was considered in these parts not a very exorbitant rate of interest,
+ nor was he unnecessarily hard upon his debtors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may seem strange that an honourable man like the General should receive
+ in his house such a motley company, comprising men of decidedly tarnished
+ reputation; but in this respect he was not at all peculiar. One constantly
+ meets in Russian society persons who are known to have been guilty of
+ flagrant dishonesty, and we find that men who are themselves honourable
+ enough associate with them on friendly terms. This social leniency, moral
+ laxity, or whatever else it may be called, is the result of various
+ causes. Several concurrent influences have tended to lower the moral
+ standard of the Noblesse. Formerly, when the noble lived on his estate, he
+ could play with impunity the petty tyrant, and could freely indulge his
+ legitimate and illegitimate caprices without any legal or moral restraint.
+ I do not at all mean to assert that all proprietors abused their
+ authority, but I venture to say that no class of men can long possess such
+ enormous arbitrary power over those around them without being thereby more
+ or less demoralised. When the noble entered the service he had not the
+ same immunity from restraint&mdash;on the contrary, his position resembled
+ rather that of the serf&mdash;but he breathed an atmosphere of peculation
+ and jobbery, little conducive to moral purity and uprightness. If an
+ official had refused to associate with those who were tainted with the
+ prevailing vices, he would have found himself completely isolated, and
+ would have been ridiculed as a modern Don Quixote. Add to this that all
+ classes of the Russian people have a certain kindly, apathetic good-nature
+ which makes them very charitable towards their neighbours, and that they
+ do not always distinguish between forgiving private injury and excusing
+ public delinquencies. If we bear all this in mind, we may readily
+ understand that in the time of serfage and maladministration a man could
+ be guilty of very reprehensible practises without incurring social
+ excommunication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the period of moral awakening, after the Crimean War and the death
+ of Nicholas I., society revelled in virtuous indignation against the
+ prevailing abuses, and placed on the pillory the most prominent
+ delinquents; but the intensity of the moral feeling has declined, and
+ something of the old apathy has returned. This might have been predicted
+ by any one well acquainted with the character and past history of the
+ Russian people. Russia advances on the road of progress, not in that
+ smooth, gradual, prosaic way to which we are accustomed, but by a series
+ of unconnected, frantic efforts, each of which is naturally followed by a
+ period of temporary exhaustion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ PROPRIETORS OF THE MODERN SCHOOL
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ A Russian Petit Maitre&mdash;His House and Surroundings&mdash;Abortive
+ Attempts to Improve Agriculture and the Condition of the Serfs&mdash;A
+ Comparison&mdash;A "Liberal" Tchinovnik&mdash;His Idea of Progress&mdash;A
+ Justice of the Peace&mdash;His Opinion of Russian Literature, Tchinovniks,
+ and Petits Maitres&mdash;His Supposed and Real Character&mdash;An Extreme
+ Radical&mdash;Disorders in the Universities&mdash;Administrative Procedure&mdash;Russia's
+ Capacity for Accomplishing Political and Social Evolutions&mdash;A Court
+ Dignitary in his Country House.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hitherto I have presented to the reader old-fashioned types which were
+ common enough thirty years ago, when I first resided in Russia, but which
+ are rapidly disappearing. Let me now present a few of the modern school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same district as Ivan Ivan'itch and the General lives Victor
+ Alexandr'itch L&mdash;&mdash;. As we approach his house we can at once
+ perceive that he differs from the majority of his neighbours. The gate is
+ painted and moves easily on its hinges, the fence is in good repair, the
+ short avenue leading up to the front door is well kept, and in the garden
+ we can perceive at a glance that more attention is paid to flowers than to
+ vegetables. The house is of wood, and not large, but it has some
+ architectural pretensions in the form of a great, pseudo-Doric wooden
+ portico that covers three-fourths of the façade. In the interior we remark
+ everywhere the influence of Western civilisation. Victor Alexandr'itch is
+ by no means richer than Ivan Ivan'itch, but his rooms are much more
+ luxuriously furnished. The furniture is of a lighter model, more
+ comfortable, and in a much better state of preservation. Instead of the
+ bare, scantily furnished sitting-room, with the old-fashioned barrel-organ
+ which played only six airs, we find an elegant drawing-room, with a piano
+ by one of the most approved makers, and numerous articles of foreign
+ manufacture, comprising a small buhl table and two bits of genuine old
+ Wedgwood. The servants are clean, and dressed in European costume. The
+ master, too, is very different in appearance. He pays great attention to
+ his toilette, wearing a dressing-gown only in the early morning, and a
+ fashionable lounging coat during the rest of the day. The Turkish pipes
+ which his grandfather loved he holds in abhorrence, and habitually smokes
+ cigarettes. With his wife and daughters he always speaks French, and calls
+ them by French or English names.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the part of the house which most strikingly illustrates the difference
+ between old and new is "le cabinet de monsieur." In the cabinet of Ivan
+ Ivan'itch the furniture consists of a broad sofa which serves as a bed, a
+ few deal chairs, and a clumsy deal table, on which are generally to be
+ found a bundle of greasy papers, an old chipped ink-bottle, a pen, and a
+ calendar. The cabinet of Victor Alexandr'itch has an entirely different
+ appearance. It is small, but at once comfortable and elegant. The
+ principal objects which it contains are a library-table, with ink-stand,
+ presse-papier, paper-knives, and other articles in keeping, and in the
+ opposite corner a large bookcase. The collection of books is remarkable,
+ not from the number of volumes or the presence of rare editions, but from
+ the variety of the subjects. History, art, fiction, the drama, political
+ economy, and agriculture are represented in about equal proportions. Some
+ of the works are in Russian, others in German, a large number in French,
+ and a few in Italian. The collection illustrates the former life and
+ present occupations of the owner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father of Victor Alexandr'itch was a landed proprietor who had made a
+ successful career in the civil service, and desired that his son should
+ follow the same profession. For this purpose Victor was first carefully
+ trained at home, and then sent to the University of Moscow, where he spent
+ four years as a student of law. From the University he passed to the
+ Ministry of the Interior in St. Petersburg, but he found the monotonous
+ routine of official life not at all suited to his taste, and very soon
+ sent in his resignation. The death of his father had made him proprietor
+ of an estate, and thither he retired, hoping to find there plenty of
+ occupation more congenial than the writing of official papers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the University of Moscow he had attended lectures on history and
+ philosophy, and had got through a large amount of desultory reading. The
+ chief result of his studies was the acquisition of many ill-digested
+ general principles, and certain vague, generous, humanitarian aspirations.
+ With this intellectual capital he hoped to lead a useful life in the
+ country. When he had repaired and furnished the house he set himself to
+ improve the estate. In the course of his promiscuous reading he had
+ stumbled on some descriptions of English and Tuscan agriculture, and had
+ there learned what wonders might be effected by a rational system of
+ farming. Why should not Russia follow the example of England and Tuscany?
+ By proper drainage, plentiful manure, good ploughs, and the cultivation of
+ artificial grasses, the production might be multiplied tenfold; and by the
+ introduction of agricultural machines the manual labour might be greatly
+ diminished. All this seemed as simple as a sum in arithmetic, and Victor
+ Alexandr'itch, more scholarum rei familiaris ignarus, without a moment's
+ hesitation expended his ready money in procuring from England a
+ threshing-machine, ploughs, harrows, and other implements of the newest
+ model.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The arrival of these was an event that was long remembered. The peasants
+ examined them with attention, not unmixed with wonder, but said nothing.
+ When the master explained to them the advantages of the new instruments,
+ they still remained silent. Only one old man, gazing at the
+ threshing-machine, remarked, in an audible "aside," "A cunning people,
+ these Germans!"* On being asked for their opinion, they replied vaguely,
+ "How should we know? It OUGHT to be so." But when their master had
+ retired, and was explaining to his wife and the French governess that the
+ chief obstacle to progress in Russia was the apathetic indolence and
+ conservative spirit of the peasantry, they expressed their opinions more
+ freely. "These may be all very well for the Germans, but they won't do for
+ us. How are our little horses to drag these big ploughs? And as for that
+ [the threshing-machine], it's of no use." Further examination and
+ reflection confirmed this first impression, and it was unanimously decided
+ that no good would come of the new-fangled inventions.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The Russian peasant comprehends all the inhabitants of
+ Western Europe under the term Nyemtsi, which in the language
+ of the educated designates only Germans. The rest of
+ humanity is composed of Pravoslavniye (Greek Orthodox),
+ Busurmanye (Mahometans), and Poliacki (Poles).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ These apprehensions proved to be only too well founded. The ploughs were
+ much too heavy for the peasants' small horses, and the threshing-machine
+ broke down at the first attempt to use it. For the purchase of lighter
+ implements or stronger horses there was no ready money, and for the
+ repairing of the threshing-machine there was not an engineer within a
+ radius of a hundred and fifty miles. The experiment was, in short, a
+ complete failure, and the new purchases were put away out of sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For some weeks after this incident Victor Alexandr'itch felt very
+ despondent, and spoke more than usual about the apathy and stupidity of
+ the peasantry. His faith in infallible science was somewhat shaken, and
+ his benevolent aspirations were for a time laid aside. But this eclipse of
+ faith was not of long duration. Gradually he recovered his normal
+ condition, and began to form new schemes. From the study of certain works
+ on political economy he learned that the system of communal property was
+ ruinous to the fertility of the soil, and that free labour was always more
+ productive than serfage. By the light of these principles he discovered
+ why the peasantry in Russia were so poor, and by what means their
+ condition could he ameliorated. The Communal land should be divided into
+ family lots, and the serfs, instead of being forced to work for the
+ proprietor, should pay a yearly sum as rent. The advantages of this change
+ he perceived clearly&mdash;as clearly as he had formerly perceived the
+ advantages of English agricultural implements&mdash;and he determined to
+ make the experiment on his own estate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His first step was to call together the more intelligent and influential
+ of his serfs, and to explain to them his project; but his efforts at
+ explanation were eminently unsuccessful. Even with regard to ordinary
+ current affairs he could not express himself in that simple, homely
+ language with which alone the peasants are familiar, and when he spoke on
+ abstract subjects he naturally became quite unintelligible to his
+ uneducated audience. The serfs listened attentively, but understood
+ nothing. He might as well have spoken to them, as he often did in another
+ kind of society, about the comparative excellence of Italian and German
+ music. At a second attempt he had rather more success. The peasants came
+ to understand that what he wished was to break up the Mir, or rural
+ Commune, and to put them all on obrok&mdash;that is to say, make them pay
+ a yearly sum instead of giving him a certain amount of agricultural
+ labour. Much to his astonishment, his scheme did not meet with any
+ sympathy. As to being put on obrok, the serfs did not much object, though
+ they preferred to remain as they were; but his proposal to break up the
+ Mir astonished and bewildered them. They regarded it as a sea-captain
+ might regard the proposal of a scientific wiseacre to knock a hole in the
+ ship's bottom in order to make her sail faster. Though they did not say
+ much, he was intelligent enough to see that they would offer a strenuous
+ passive resistance, and as he did not wish to act tyrannically, he let the
+ matter drop. Thus a second benevolent scheme was shipwrecked. Many other
+ schemes had a similar fate, and Victor Alexandr'itch began to perceive
+ that it was very difficult to do good in this world, especially when the
+ persons to be benefited were Russian peasants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In reality the fault lay less with the serfs than with their master.
+ Victor Alexandr'itch was by no means a stupid man. On the contrary, he had
+ more than average talents. Few men were more capable of grasping a new
+ idea and forming a scheme for its realisation, and few men could play more
+ dexterously with abstract principles. What he wanted was the power of
+ dealing with concrete facts. The principles which he had acquired from
+ University lectures and desultory reading were far too vague and abstract
+ for practical use. He had studied abstract science without gaining any
+ technical knowledge of details, and consequently when he stood face to
+ face with real life he was like a student who, having studied mechanics in
+ text-books, is suddenly placed in a workshop and ordered to construct a
+ machine. Only there was one difference: Victor Alexandr'itch was not
+ ordered to do anything. Voluntarily, without any apparent necessity, he
+ set himself to work with tools which he could not handle. It was this that
+ chiefly puzzled the peasants. Why should he trouble himself with these new
+ schemes, when he might live comfortably as he was? In some of his projects
+ they could detect a desire to increase the revenue, but in others they
+ could discover no such motive. In these latter they attributed his conduct
+ to pure caprice, and put it into the same category as those mad pranks in
+ which proprietors of jovial humour sometimes indulged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the last years of serfage there were a good many landed proprietors
+ like Victor Alexandr'itch&mdash;men who wished to do something beneficent,
+ and did not know how to do it. When serfage was being abolished the
+ majority of these men took an active part in the great work and rendered
+ valuable service to their country. Victor Alexandr'itch acted otherwise.
+ At first he sympathised warmly with the proposed emancipation and wrote
+ several articles on the advantages of free labour, but when the Government
+ took the matter into its own hands he declared that the officials had
+ deceived and slighted the Noblesse, and he went over to the opposition.
+ Before the Imperial Edict was signed he went abroad, and travelled for
+ three years in Germany, France, and Italy. Shortly after his return he
+ married a pretty, accomplished young lady, the daughter of an eminent
+ official in St. Petersburg, and since that time he has lived in his
+ country-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though a man of education and culture, Victor Alexandr'itch spends his
+ time in almost as indolent a way as the men of the old school. He rises
+ somewhat later, and instead of sitting by the open window and gazing into
+ the courtyard, he turns over the pages of a book or periodical. Instead of
+ dining at midday and supping at nine o'clock, he takes dejeuner at twelve
+ and dines at five. He spends less time in sitting in the verandah and
+ pacing up and down with his hands behind his back, for he can vary the
+ operation of time-killing by occasionally writing a letter, or by standing
+ behind his wife at the piano while she plays selections from Mozart and
+ Beethoven. But these peculiarities are merely variations in detail. If
+ there is any essential difference between the lives of Victor
+ Alexandr'itch and of Ivan Ivan'itch, it is in the fact that the former
+ never goes out into the fields to see how the work is done, and never
+ troubles himself with the state of the weather, the condition of the
+ crops, and cognate subjects. He leaves the management of his estate
+ entirely to his steward, and refers to that personage all peasants who
+ come to him with complaints or petitions. Though he takes a deep interest
+ in the peasant as an impersonal, abstract entity, and loves to contemplate
+ concrete examples of the genus in the works of certain popular authors, he
+ does not like to have any direct relations with peasants in the flesh. If
+ he has to speak with them he always feels awkward, and suffers from the
+ odour of their sheepskins. Ivan Ivan'itch is ever ready to talk with the
+ peasants, and give them sound, practical advice or severe admonitions; and
+ in the old times he was apt, in moments of irritation, to supplement his
+ admonitions by a free use of his fists. Victor Alexandr'itch, on the
+ contrary, never could give any advice except vague commonplace, and as to
+ using his fist, he would have shrunk from that, not only from respect to
+ humanitarian principles, but also from motives which belong to the region
+ of aesthetic sensitiveness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This difference between the two men has an important influence on their
+ pecuniary affairs. The stewards of both steal from their masters; but that
+ of Ivan Ivan'itch steals with difficulty, and to a very limited extent,
+ whereas that of Victor Alexandr'itch steals regularly and methodically,
+ and counts his gains, not by kopecks, but by roubles. Though the two
+ estates are of about the same size and value, they give a very different
+ revenue. The rough, practical man has a much larger income than his
+ elegant, well-educated neighbour, and at the same time spends very much
+ less. The consequences of this, if not at present visible, must some day
+ become painfully apparent. Ivan Ivan'itch will doubtless leave to his
+ children an unencumbered estate and a certain amount of capital. The
+ children of Victor Alexandr'itch have a different prospect. He has already
+ begun to mortgage his property and to cut down the timber, and he always
+ finds a deficit at the end of the year. What will become of his wife and
+ children when the estate comes to be sold for payment of the mortgage, it
+ is difficult to predict. He thinks very little of that eventuality, and
+ when his thoughts happen to wander in that direction he consoles himself
+ with the thought that before the crash comes he will have inherited a
+ fortune from a rich uncle who has no children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The proprietors of the old school lead the same uniform, monotonous life
+ year after year, with very little variation. Victor Alexandr'itch, on the
+ contrary, feels the need of a periodical return to "civilised society,"
+ and accordingly spends a few weeks every winter in St. Petersburg. During
+ the summer months he has the society of his brother&mdash;un homme tout a
+ fait civilise&mdash;who possesses an estate a few miles off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This brother, Vladimir Alexandr'itch, was educated in the School of Law in
+ St. Petersburg, and has since risen rapidly in the service. He holds now a
+ prominent position in one of the Ministries, and has the honourary court
+ title of "Chambellan de sa Majeste." He is a marked man in the higher
+ circles of the Administration, and will, it is thought, some day become
+ Minister. Though an adherent of enlightened views, and a professed
+ "Liberal," he contrives to keep on very good terms with those who imagine
+ themselves to be "Conservatives." In this he is assisted by his soft, oily
+ manner. If you express an opinion to him he will always begin by telling
+ you that you are quite right; and if he ends by showing you that you are
+ quite wrong, he will at least make you feel that your error is not only
+ excusable, but in some way highly creditable to your intellectual
+ acuteness or goodness of heart. In spite of his Liberalism he is a staunch
+ Monarchist, and considers that the time has not yet come for the Emperor
+ to grant a Constitution. He recognises that the present order of things
+ has its defects, but thinks that, on the whole, it acts very well, and
+ would act much better if certain high officials were removed, and more
+ energetic men put in their places. Like all genuine St. Petersburg
+ tchinovniks (officials), he has great faith in the miraculous power of
+ Imperial ukazes and Ministerial circulars, and believes that national
+ progress consists in multiplying these documents, and centralising the
+ Administration, so as to give them more effect. As a supplementary means
+ of progress he highly approves of aesthetic culture, and he can speak with
+ some eloquence of the humanising influence of the fine arts. For his own
+ part he is well acquainted with French and English classics, and
+ particularly admires Macaulay, whom he declares to have been not only a
+ great writer, but also a great statesman. Among writers of fiction he
+ gives the palm to George Eliot, and speaks of the novelists of his own
+ country, and, indeed, of Russian literature as a whole, in the most
+ disparaging terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A very different estimate of Russian literature is held by Alexander
+ Ivan'itch N&mdash;&mdash;, formerly arbiter in peasant affairs, and
+ afterwards justice of the peace. Discussions on this subject often take
+ place between the two. The admirer of Macaulay declares that Russia has,
+ properly speaking, no literature whatever, and that the works which bear
+ the names of Russian authors are nothing but a feeble echo of the
+ literature of Western Europe. "Imitators," he is wont to say, "skilful
+ imitators, we have produced in abundance. But where is there a man of
+ original genius? What is our famous poet Zhukofski? A translator. What is
+ Pushkin? A clever pupil of the romantic school. What is Lermontoff? A
+ feeble imitator of Byron. What is Gogol?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this point Alexander Ivan'itch invariable intervenes. He is ready to
+ sacrifice all the pseudo-classic and romantic poetry, and, in fact, the
+ whole of Russian literature anterior to about the year 1840, but he will
+ not allow anything disrespectful to be said of Gogol, who about that time
+ founded the Russian realistic school. "Gogol," he holds, "was a great and
+ original genius. Gogol not only created a new kind of literature; he at
+ the same time transformed the reading public, and inaugurated a new era in
+ the intellectual development of the nation. By his humorous, satirical
+ sketches he swept away the metaphysical dreaming and foolish romantic
+ affectation then in fashion, and taught men to see their country as it
+ was, in all its hideous ugliness. With his help the young generation
+ perceived the rottenness of the Administration, and the meanness,
+ stupidity, dishonesty, and worthlessness of the landed proprietors, whom
+ he made the special butt of his ridicule. The recognition of defects
+ produced a desire for reform. From laughing at the proprietors there was
+ but one step to despising them, and when we learned to despise the
+ proprietors we naturally came to sympathise with the serfs. Thus the
+ Emancipation was prepared by the literature; and when the great question
+ had to be solved, it was the literature that discovered a satisfactory
+ solution."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is a subject on which Alexander Ivan'itch feels very strongly, and on
+ which he always speaks with warmth. He knows a good deal regarding the
+ intellectual movement which began about 1840, and culminated in the great
+ reforms of the sixties. As a University student he troubled himself very
+ little with serious academic work, but he read with intense interest all
+ the leading periodicals, and adopted the doctrine of Belinski that art
+ should not be cultivated for its own sake, but should be made subservient
+ to social progress. This belief was confirmed by a perusal of some of
+ George Sand's earlier works, which were for him a kind of revelation.
+ Social questions engrossed his thoughts, and all other subjects seemed
+ puny by comparison. When the Emancipation question was raised he saw an
+ opportunity of applying some of his theories, and threw himself
+ enthusiastically into the new movement as an ardent abolitionist. When the
+ law was passed he helped to put it into execution by serving for three
+ years as an Arbiter of the Peace. Now he is an old man, but he has
+ preserved some of his youthful enthusiasm, attends regularly the annual
+ assemblies of the Zemstvo, and takes a lively interest in all public
+ affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As an ardent partisan of local self-government he habitually scoffs at the
+ centralised bureaucracy, which he proclaims to be the great bane of his
+ unhappy country. "These tchinovniks," he is wont to say in moments of
+ excitement, "who live in St. Petersburg and govern the Empire, know about
+ as much of Russia as they do of China. They live in a world of official
+ documents, and are hopelessly ignorant of the real wants and interests of
+ the people. So long as all the required formalities are duly observed they
+ are perfectly satisfied. The people may be allowed to die of starvation if
+ only the fact do not appear in the official reports. Powerless to do any
+ good themselves, they are powerful enough to prevent others from working
+ for the public good, and are extremely jealous of all private initiative.
+ How have they acted, for instance, towards the Zemstvo? The Zemstvo is
+ really a good institution, and might have done great things if it had been
+ left alone, but as soon as it began to show a little independent energy
+ the officials at once clipped its wings and then strangled it. Towards the
+ Press they have acted in the same way. They are afraid of the Press,
+ because they fear above all things a healthy public opinion, which the
+ Press alone can create. Everything that disturbs the habitual routine
+ alarms them. Russia cannot make any real progress so long as she is ruled
+ by these cursed tchinovniks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarcely less pernicious than the tchinovnik, in the eyes of our would-be
+ reformer, is the baritch&mdash;that is to say, the pampered, capricious,
+ spoiled child of mature years, whose life is spent in elegant indolence
+ and fine talking. Our friend Victor Alexandr'itch is commonly selected as
+ a representative of this type. "Look at him!" exclaims Alexander
+ Ivan'itch. "What a useless, contemptible member of society! In spite of
+ his generous aspirations he never succeeds in doing anything useful to
+ himself or to others. When the peasant question was raised and there was
+ work to be done, he went abroad and talked liberalism in Paris and
+ Baden-Baden. Though he reads, or at least professes to read, books on
+ agriculture, and is always ready to discourse on the best means of
+ preventing the exhaustion of the soil, he knows less of farming than a
+ peasant-boy of twelve, and when he goes into the fields he can hardly
+ distinguish rye from oats. Instead of babbling about German and Italian
+ music, he would do well to learn a little about practical farming, and
+ look after his estate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst Alexander Ivan'itch thus censures his neighbours, he is himself not
+ without detractors. Some staid old proprietors regard him as a dangerous
+ man, and quote expressions of his which seem to indicate that his notions
+ of property are somewhat loose. Many consider that his liberalism is of a
+ very violent kind, and that he has strong republican sympathies. In his
+ decisions as Justice he often leaned, it is said, to the side of the
+ peasants against the proprietors. Then he was always trying to induce the
+ peasants of the neighbouring villages to found schools, and he had
+ wonderful ideas about the best method of teaching children. These and
+ similar facts make many people believe that he has very advanced ideas,
+ and one old gentleman habitually calls him&mdash;half in joke and half in
+ earnest&mdash;"our friend the communist."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In reality Alexander Ivan'itch has nothing of the communist about him.
+ Though he loudly denounces the tchinovnik spirit&mdash;or, as we should
+ say, red-tape in all its forms&mdash;and is an ardent partisan of local
+ self-government, he is one of the last men in the world to take part in
+ any revolutionary movement, he would like to see the Central Government
+ enlightened and controlled by public opinion and by a national
+ representation, but he believes that this can only be effected by
+ voluntary concessions on the part of the autocratic power. He has,
+ perhaps, a sentimental love of the peasantry, and is always ready to
+ advocate its interests; but he has come too much in contact with
+ individual peasants to accept those idealised descriptions in which some
+ popular writers indulge, and it may safely be asserted that the accusation
+ of his voluntarily favouring peasants at the expense of the proprietors is
+ wholly unfounded. Alexander Ivan'itch is, in fact, a quiet, sensible man,
+ who is capable of generous enthusiasm, and is not at all satisfied with
+ the existing state of things; but he is not a dreamer and a
+ revolutionnaire, as some of his neighbours assert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am afraid I cannot say as much for his younger brother Nikolai, who
+ lives with him. Nikolai Ivan'itch is a tall, slender man, about sixty
+ years of age, with emaciated face, bilious complexion and long black hair&mdash;evidently
+ a person of excitable, nervous temperament. When he speaks he articulates
+ rapidly, and uses more gesticulation than is common among his countrymen.
+ His favourite subject of conversation, or rather of discourse, for he more
+ frequently preaches than talks, is the lamentable state of the country and
+ the worthlessness of the Government. Against the Government he has a great
+ many causes for complaint, and one or two of a personal kind. In 1861 he
+ was a student in the University of St. Petersburg. At that time there was
+ a great deal of public excitement all over Russia, and especially in the
+ capital. The serfs had just been emancipated, and other important reforms
+ had been undertaken. There was a general conviction among the young
+ generation&mdash;and it must be added among many older men&mdash;that the
+ autocratic, paternal system of government was at an end, and that Russia
+ was about to be reorganised according to the most advanced principles of
+ political and social science. The students, sharing this conviction,
+ wished to be freed from all academical authority, and to organise a kind
+ of academic self-government. They desired especially the right of holding
+ public meetings for the discussion of their common affairs. The
+ authorities would not allow this, and issued a list of rules prohibiting
+ meetings and raising the class-fees, so as practically to exclude many of
+ the poorer students. This was felt to be a wanton insult to the spirit of
+ the new era. In spite of the prohibition, indignation meetings were held,
+ and fiery speeches made by male and female orators, first in the
+ class-rooms, and afterwards in the courtyard of the University. On one
+ occasion a long procession marched through the principal streets to the
+ house of the Curator. Never had such a spectacle been seen before in St.
+ Petersburg. Timid people feared that it was the commencement of a
+ revolution, and dreamed about barricades. At last the authorities took
+ energetic measures; about three hundred students were arrested, and of
+ these, thirty-two were expelled from the University.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among those who were expelled was Nicolai Ivan'itch. All his hopes of
+ becoming a professor, as he had intended, were thereby shipwrecked, and he
+ had to look out for some other profession. A literary career now seemed
+ the most promising, and certainly the most congenial to his tastes. It
+ would enable him to gratify his ambition of being a public man, and give
+ him opportunities of attacking and annoying his persecutors. He had
+ already written occasionally for one of the leading periodicals, and now
+ he became a regular contributor. His stock of positive knowledge was not
+ very large, but he had the power of writing fluently and of making his
+ readers believe that he had an unlimited store of political wisdom which
+ the Press-censure prevented him from publishing. Besides this, he had the
+ talent of saying sharp, satirical things about those in authority, in such
+ a way that even a Press censor could not easily raise objections. Articles
+ written in this style were sure at that time to be popular, and his had a
+ very great success. He became a known man in literary circles, and for a
+ time all went well. But gradually he became less cautious, whilst the
+ authorities became more vigilant. Some copies of a violent seditious
+ proclamation fell into the hands of the police, and it was generally
+ believed that the document proceeded from the coterie to which he
+ belonged. From that moment he was carefully watched, till one night he was
+ unexpectedly roused from his sleep by a gendarme and conveyed to the
+ fortress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When a man is arrested in this way for a real or supposed political
+ offence, there are two modes of dealing with him. He may be tried before a
+ regular tribunal, or he may be dealt with "by administrative procedure"
+ (administrativnym poryadkom). In the former case he will, if convicted, be
+ condemned to imprisonment for a certain term; or, if the offence be of a
+ graver nature, he may be transported to Siberia either for a fixed period
+ or for life. By the administrative procedure he is simply removed without
+ a trial to some distant town, and compelled to live there under police
+ supervision during his Majesty's pleasure. Nikolai Ivan'itch was treated
+ "administratively," because the authorities, though convinced that he was
+ a dangerous character, could not find sufficient evidence to procure his
+ conviction before a court of justice. For five years he lived under police
+ supervision in a small town near the White Sea, and then one day he was
+ informed, without any explanation, that he might go and live anywhere he
+ pleased except in St. Petersburg and Moscow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since that time he has lived with his brother, and spends his time in
+ brooding over his grievances and bewailing his shattered illusions. He has
+ lost none of that fluency which gained him an ephemeral literary
+ reputation, and can speak by the hour on political and social questions to
+ any one who will listen to him. It is extremely difficult, however, to
+ follow his discourses, and utterly impossible to retain them in the
+ memory. They belong to what may be called political metaphysics&mdash;for
+ though he professes to hold metaphysics in abhorrence, he is himself a
+ thorough metaphysician in his modes of thought. He lives, indeed, in a
+ world of abstract conceptions, in which he can scarcely perceive concrete
+ facts, and his arguments are always a kind of clever juggling with such
+ equivocal, conventional terms as aristocracy, bourgeoisie, monarchy, and
+ the like. At concrete facts he arrives, not directly by observation, but
+ by deductions from general principles, so that his facts can never by any
+ possibility contradict his theories. Then he has certain axioms which he
+ tacitly assumes, and on which all his arguments are based; as, for
+ instance, that everything to which the term "liberal" can be applied must
+ necessarily be good at all times and under all conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among a mass of vague conceptions which it is impossible to reduce to any
+ clearly defined form he has a few ideas which are perhaps not strictly
+ true, but which are at least intelligible. Among these is his conviction
+ that Russia has let slip a magnificent opportunity of distancing all
+ Europe on the road of progress. She might, he thinks, at the time of the
+ Emancipation, have boldly accepted all the most advanced principles of
+ political and social science, and have completely reorganised the
+ political and social structure in accordance with them. Other nations
+ could not take such a step, because they are old and decrepit, filled with
+ stubborn, hereditary prejudices, and cursed with an aristocracy and a
+ bourgeoisie; but Russia is young, knows nothing of social castes, and has
+ no deep-rooted prejudices to contend with. The population is like potter's
+ clay, which can be made to assume any form that science may recommend.
+ Alexander II. began a magnificent sociological experiment, but he stopped
+ half-way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some day, he believes, the experiment will be completed, but not by the
+ autocratic power. In his opinion autocracy is "played out," and must give
+ way to Parliamentary institutions. For him a Constitution is a kind of
+ omnipotent fetish. You may try to explain to him that a Parliamentary
+ regime, whatever its advantages may be, necessarily produces political
+ parties and political conflicts, and is not nearly so suitable for grand
+ sociological experiments as a good paternal despotism. You may try to
+ convince him that, though it may be difficult to convert an autocrat, it
+ is infinitely more difficult to convert a House of Commons. But all your
+ efforts will be in vain. He will assure you that a Russian Parliament
+ would be something quite different from what Parliaments commonly are. It
+ would contain no parties, for Russia has no social castes, and would be
+ guided entirely by scientific considerations&mdash;as free from prejudice
+ and personal influences as a philosopher speculating on the nature of the
+ Infinite! In short, he evidently imagines that a national Parliament would
+ be composed of himself and his friends, and that the nation would calmly
+ submit to their ukazes, as it has hitherto submitted to the ukazes of the
+ Tsars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pending the advent of this political Millennium, when unimpassioned
+ science is to reign supreme, Nikolai Ivan'itch allows himself the luxury
+ of indulging in some very decided political animosities, and he hates with
+ the fervour of a fanatic. Firstly and chiefly, he hates what he calls the
+ bourgeoisie&mdash;he is obliged to use the French word, because his native
+ language does not contain an equivalent term&mdash;and especially
+ capitalists of all sorts and dimensions. Next, he hates aristocracy,
+ especially a form of aristocracy called Feudalism. To these abstract terms
+ he does not attach a very precise meaning, but he hates the entities which
+ they are supposed to represent quite as heartily as if they were personal
+ enemies. Among the things which he hates in his own country, the
+ Autocratic Power holds the first place. Next, as an emanation from the
+ Autocratic Power, come the tchinovniks, and especially the gendarmes. Then
+ come the landed proprietors. Though he is himself a landed proprietor, he
+ regards the class as cumberers of the ground, and thinks that all their
+ land should be confiscated and distributed among the peasantry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All proprietors have the misfortune to come under his sweeping
+ denunciations, because they are inconsistent with his ideal of a peasant
+ Empire, but he recognises amongst them degrees of depravity. Some are
+ simply obstructive, whilst others are actively prejudicial to the public
+ welfare. Among these latter a special object of aversion is Prince S&mdash;&mdash;,
+ because he not only possesses very large estates, but at the same time has
+ aristocratic pretensions, and calls himself Conservative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince S&mdash;&mdash; is by far the most important man in the district.
+ His family is one of the oldest in the country, but he does not owe his
+ influence to his pedigree, for pedigree pure and simple does not count for
+ much in Russia. He is influential and respected because he is a great
+ land-holder with a high official position, and belongs by birth to that
+ group of families which forms the permanent nucleus of the ever-changing
+ Court society. His father and grandfather were important personages in the
+ Administration and at Court, and his sons and grandsons will probably in
+ this respect follow in the footsteps of their ancestors. Though in the eye
+ of the law all nobles are equal, and, theoretically speaking, promotion is
+ gained exclusively by personal merit, yet, in reality, those who have
+ friends at Court rise more easily and more rapidly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince has had a prosperous but not very eventful life. He was
+ educated, first at home, under an English tutor, and afterwards in the
+ Corps des Pages. On leaving this institution he entered a regiment of the
+ Guards, and rose steadily to high military rank. His activity, however,
+ has been chiefly in the civil administration, and he now has a seat in the
+ Council of State. Though he has always taken a certain interest in public
+ affairs, he did not play an important part in any of the great reforms.
+ When the peasant question was raised he sympathised with the idea of
+ Emancipation, but did not at all sympathise with the idea of giving land
+ to the emancipated serfs and preserving the Communal institutions. What he
+ desired was that the proprietors should liberate their serfs without any
+ pecuniary indemnity, and should receive in return a certain share of
+ political power. His scheme was not adopted, but he has not relinquished
+ the hope that the great landed proprietors may somehow obtain a social and
+ political position similar to that of the great land-owners in England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Official duties and social relations compel the Prince to live for a large
+ part of the year in the capital. He spends only a few weeks yearly on his
+ estate. The house is large, and fitted up in the English style, with a
+ view to combining elegance and comfort. It contains several spacious
+ apartments, a library, and a billiard-room. There is an extensive park, an
+ immense garden with hot houses, numerous horses and carriages, and a
+ legion of servants. In the drawing-room is a plentiful supply of English
+ and French books, newspapers, and periodicals, including the Journal de
+ St. Petersbourg, which gives the news of the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The family have, in short, all the conveniences and comforts which money
+ and refinement can procure, but it cannot be said that they greatly enjoy
+ the time spent in the country. The Princess has no decided objection to
+ it. She is devoted to a little grandchild, is fond of reading and
+ correspondence, amuses herself with a school and hospital which she has
+ founded for the peasantry, and occasionally drives over to see her friend,
+ the Countess N&mdash;&mdash;, who lives about fifteen miles off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince, however, finds country life excessively dull. He does not care
+ for riding or shooting, and he finds nothing else to do. He knows nothing
+ about the management of his estate, and holds consultations with the
+ steward merely pro forma&mdash;this estate and the others which he
+ possesses in different provinces being ruled by a head-steward in St.
+ Petersburg, in whom he has the most complete confidence. In the vicinity
+ there is no one with whom he cares to associate. Naturally he is not a
+ sociable man, and he has acquired a stiff, formal, reserved manner that is
+ rarely met with in Russia. This manner repels the neighbouring proprietors&mdash;a
+ fact that he does not at all regret, for they do not belong to his monde,
+ and they have in their manners and habits a free-and-easy rusticity which
+ is positively disagreeable to him. His relations with them are therefore
+ confined to formal calls. The greater part of the day he spends in
+ listless loitering, frequently yawning, regretting the routine of St.
+ Petersburg life&mdash;the pleasant chats with his colleagues, the opera,
+ the ballet, the French theatre, and the quiet rubber at the Club Anglais.
+ His spirits rise as the day of his departure approaches, and when he
+ drives off to the station he looks bright and cheerful. If he consulted
+ merely his own tastes he would never visit his estates at all, and would
+ spend his summer holidays in Germany, France, or Switzerland, as he did in
+ his bachelor days; but as a large landowner he considers it right to
+ sacrifice his personal inclinations to the duties of his position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is, by the way, another princely magnate in the district, and I
+ ought perhaps to introduce him to my readers, because he represents
+ worthily a new type. Like Prince S&mdash;&mdash;, of whom I have just
+ spoken, he is a great land-owner and a descendant of the half-mythical
+ Rurik; but he has no official rank, and does not possess a single grand
+ cordon. In that respect he has followed in the footsteps of his father and
+ grandfather, who had something of the frondeur spirit, and preferred the
+ position of a grand seigneur and a country gentleman to that of a
+ tchinovnik and a courtier. In the Liberal camp he is regarded as a
+ Conservative, but he has little in common with the Krepostnik, who
+ declares that the reforms of the last half-century were a mistake, that
+ everything is going to the bad, that the emancipated serfs are all
+ sluggards, drunkards, and thieves, that the local self-government is an
+ ingenious machine for wasting money, and that the reformed law-courts have
+ conferred benefits only on the lawyers. On the contrary, he recognises the
+ necessity and beneficent results of the reforms, and with regard to the
+ future he has none of the despairing pessimism of the incorrigible old
+ Tory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in order that real progress should be made, he thinks that certain
+ current and fashionable errors must be avoided, and among these errors he
+ places, in the first rank, the views and principles of the advanced
+ Liberals, who have a blind admiration for Western Europe, and for what
+ they are pleased to call the results of science. Like the Liberals of the
+ West, these gentlemen assume that the best form of government is
+ constitutionalism, monarchical or republican, on a broad democratic basis,
+ and towards the realisation of this ideal all their efforts are directed.
+ Not so our Conservative friend. While admitting that democratic
+ Parliamentary institutions may be the best form of government for the more
+ advanced nations of the West, he maintains that the only firm foundation
+ for the Russian Empire, and the only solid guarantee of its future
+ prosperity, is the Autocratic Power, which is the sole genuine
+ representative of the national spirit. Looking at the past from this point
+ of view, he perceives that the Tsars have ever identified themselves with
+ the nation, and have always understood, in part instinctively and in part
+ by reflection, what the nation really required. Whenever the infiltration
+ of Western ideas threatened to swamp the national individuality, the
+ Autocratic Power intervened and averted the danger by timely precautions.
+ Something of the kind may be observed, he believes, at present, when the
+ Liberals are clamouring for a Parliament and a Constitution; but the
+ Autocratic Power is on the alert, and is making itself acquainted with the
+ needs of the people by means far more effectual than could be supplied by
+ oratorical politicians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the efforts of the Zemstvo in this direction, and with the activity
+ of the Zemstvo generally, the Prince has little sympathy, partly because
+ the institution is in the hands of the Liberals and is guided by their
+ unpractical ideas, and partly because it enables some ambitious outsiders
+ to acquire the influence in local affairs which ought to be exercised by
+ the old-established noble families of the neighbourhood. What he would
+ like to see is an enlightened, influential gentry working in conjunction
+ with the Autocratic Power for the good of the country. If Russia could
+ produce a few hundred thousand men like himself, his ideal might perhaps
+ be realised. For the present, such men are extremely rare&mdash;I should
+ have difficulty in naming a dozen of them&mdash;and aristocratic ideas are
+ extremely unpopular among the great majority of the educated classes. When
+ a Russian indulges in political speculation, he is pretty sure to show
+ himself thoroughly democratic, with a strong leaning to socialism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince belongs to the highest rank of the Russian Noblesse. If we wish
+ to get an idea of the lowest rank, we can find in the neighbourhood a
+ number of poor, uneducated men, who live in small, squalid houses, and are
+ not easily to be distinguished from peasants. They are nobles, like his
+ Highness; but, unlike him, they enjoy no social consideration, and their
+ landed property consists of a few acres of land which barely supply them
+ with the first necessaries of life. If we went to other parts of the
+ country we might find men in this condition bearing the title of Prince!
+ This is the natural result of the Russian law of inheritance, which does
+ not recognise the principle of primogeniture with regard to titles and
+ estates. All the sons of a Prince are Princes, and at his death his
+ property, movable and immovable, is divided amongst them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ SOCIAL CLASSES
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Do Social Classes or Castes Exist in Russia?&mdash;Well-marked Social
+ Types&mdash;Classes Recognised by the Legislation and the Official
+ Statistics&mdash;Origin and Gradual Formation of these Classes&mdash;Peculiarity
+ in the Historical Development of Russia&mdash;Political Life and Political
+ Parties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the preceding pages I have repeatedly used the expression "social
+ classes," and probably more than once the reader has felt inclined to ask,
+ What are social classes in the Russian sense of the term? It may be well,
+ therefore, before going farther, to answer this question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the question were put to a Russian it is not at all unlikely that he
+ would reply somewhat in this fashion: "In Russia there are no social
+ classes, and there never have been any. That fact constitutes one of the
+ most striking peculiarities of her historical development, and one of the
+ surest foundations of her future greatness. We know nothing, and have
+ never known anything, of those class distinctions and class enmities which
+ in Western Europe have often rudely shaken society in past times, and
+ imperil its existence in the future."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This statement will not be readily accepted by the traveller who visits
+ Russia with no preconceived ideas and forms his opinions from his own
+ observations. To him it seems that class distinctions form one of the most
+ prominent characteristics of Russian society. In a few days he learns to
+ distinguish the various classes by their outward appearance. He easily
+ recognises the French-speaking nobles in West-European costume; the burly,
+ bearded merchant in black cloth cap and long, shiny, double-breasted coat;
+ the priest with his uncut hair and flowing robes; the peasant with his
+ full, fair beard and unsavoury, greasy sheepskin. Meeting everywhere those
+ well-marked types, he naturally assumes that Russian society is composed
+ of exclusive castes; and this first impression will be fully confirmed by
+ a glance at the Code. On examining that monumental work, he finds that an
+ entire volume&mdash;and by no means the smallest&mdash;is devoted to the
+ rights and obligations of the various classes. From this he concludes that
+ the classes have a legal as well as an actual existence. To make assurance
+ doubly sure he turns to official statistics, and there he finds the
+ following table:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Hereditary nobles........652,887
+ Personal nobles..........374,367
+ Clerical classes.........695,905
+ Town classes...........7,196,005
+ Rural classes.........63,840,291
+ Military classes.......4,767,703
+ Foreigners...............153,185
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; 77,680,293*
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Livron: "Statistitcheskoe Obozrenie Rossiiskoi Imperii,"
+ St. Petersburg, 1875. The above figures include the whole
+ Empire. The figures according to the latest census (1897)
+ are not yet available.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Armed with these materials, the traveller goes to his Russian friends who
+ have assured him that their country knows nothing of class distinctions.
+ He is confident of being able to convince them that they have been
+ labouring under a strange delusion, but he will be disappointed. They will
+ tell him that these laws and statistics prove nothing, and that the
+ categories therein mentioned are mere administrative fictions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This apparent contradiction is to be explained by the equivocal meaning of
+ the Russian terms Sosloviya and Sostoyaniya, which are commonly translated
+ "social classes." If by these terms are meant "castes" in the Oriental
+ sense, then it may be confidently asserted that such do not exist in
+ Russia. Between the nobles, the clergy, the burghers, and the peasants
+ there are no distinctions of race and no impassable barriers. The peasant
+ often becomes a merchant, and there are many cases on record of peasants
+ and sons of parish priests becoming nobles. Until very recently the parish
+ clergy composed, as we have seen, a peculiar and exclusive class, with
+ many of the characteristics of a caste; but this has been changed, and it
+ may now be said that in Russia there are no castes in the Oriental sense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the word Sosloviya be taken to mean an organised political unit with an
+ esprit de corps and a clearly conceived political aim, it may likewise be
+ admitted that there are none in Russia. As there has been for centuries no
+ political life among the subjects of the Tsars, there have been no
+ political parties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, to say that social classes have never existed in Russia
+ and that the categories which appear in the legislation and in the
+ official statistics are mere administrative fictions, is a piece of gross
+ exaggeration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the very beginning of Russian history we can detect unmistakably the
+ existence of social classes, such as the Princes, the Boyars, the armed
+ followers of the Princes, the peasantry, the slaves, and various others;
+ and one of the oldest legal documents which we possess&mdash;the "Russian
+ Right" (Russkaya Pravda) of the Grand Prince Yaroslaff (1019-1054)&mdash;contains
+ irrefragable proof, in the penalties attached to various crimes, that
+ these classes were formally recognised by the legislation. Since that time
+ they have frequently changed their character, but they have never at any
+ period ceased to exist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In ancient times, when there was very little administrative regulation,
+ the classes had perhaps no clearly defined boundaries, and the
+ peculiarities which distinguished them from each other were actual rather
+ than legal&mdash;lying in the mode of life and social position rather than
+ in peculiar obligations and privileges. But as the autocratic power
+ developed and strove to transform the nation into a State with a highly
+ centralised administration, the legal element in the social distinctions
+ became more and more prominent. For financial and other purposes the
+ people had to be divided into various categories. The actual distinctions
+ were of course taken as the basis of the legal classification, but the
+ classifying had more than a merely formal significance. The necessity of
+ clearly defining the different groups entailed the necessity of elevating
+ and strengthening the barriers which already existed between them, and the
+ difficulty of passing from one group to another was thereby increased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this work of classification Peter the Great especially distinguished
+ himself. With his insatiable passion for regulation, he raised formidable
+ barriers between the different categories, and defined the obligations of
+ each with microscopic minuteness. After his death the work was carried on
+ in the same spirit, and the tendency reached its climax in the reign of
+ Nicholas, when the number of students to be received in the universities
+ was determined by Imperial ukaz!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the reign of Catherine a new element was introduced into the official
+ conception of social classes. Down to her time the Government had thought
+ merely of class obligations; under the influence of Western ideas she
+ introduced the conception of class rights. She wished, as we have seen, to
+ have in her Empire a Noblesse and tiers-etat like those which existed in
+ France, and for this purpose she granted, first to the Dvoryanstvo and
+ afterwards to the towns, an Imperial Charter, or Bill of Rights.
+ Succeeding sovereigns have acted in the same spirit, and the Code now
+ confers on each class numerous privileges as well as numerous obligations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, we see, the oft-repeated assertion that the Russian social classes
+ are simply artificial categories created by the legislature is to a
+ certain extent true, but is by no means accurate. The social groups, such
+ as peasants, landed proprietors, and the like, came into existence in
+ Russia, as in other countries, by the simple force of circumstances. The
+ legislature merely recognised and developed the social distinctions which
+ already existed. The legal status, obligations, and rights of each group
+ were minutely defined and regulated, and legal barriers were added to the
+ actual barriers which separated the groups from each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is peculiar in the historical development of Russia is this: until
+ lately she remained an almost exclusively agricultural Empire with
+ abundance of unoccupied land. Her history presents, therefore, few of
+ those conflicts which result from the variety of social conditions and the
+ intensified struggle for existence. Certain social groups were, indeed,
+ formed in the course of time, but they were never allowed to fight out
+ their own battles. The irresistible autocratic power kept them always in
+ check and fashioned them into whatever form it thought proper, defining
+ minutely and carefully their obligations, their rights, their mutual
+ relations, and their respective positions in the political organisation.
+ Hence we find in the history of Russia almost no trace of those class
+ hatreds which appear so conspicuously in the history of Western Europe.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This is, I believe, the true explanation of an important
+ fact, which the Slavophils endeavoured to explain by an
+ ill-authenticated legend (vide supra p.151).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The practical consequence of all this is that in Russia at the present day
+ there is very little caste spirit or caste prejudice. Within half-a-dozen
+ years after the emancipation of the serfs, proprietors and peasants,
+ forgetting apparently their old relationship of master and serf, were
+ working amicably together in the new local administration, and not a few
+ similar curious facts might be cited. The confident anticipation of many
+ Russians that their country will one day enjoy political life without
+ political parties is, if not a contradiction in terms, at least a Utopian
+ absurdity; but we may be sure that when political parties do appear they
+ will be very different from those which exist in Germany, France, and
+ England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, let us see how the country is governed without political
+ parties and without political life in the West-European sense of the term.
+ This will form the subject of our next chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE IMPERIAL ADMINISTRATION AND THE OFFICIALS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The Officials in Norgorod Assist Me in My Studies&mdash;The Modern
+ Imperial Administration Created by Peter the Great, and Developed by his
+ Successors&mdash;A Slavophil's View of the Administration&mdash;The
+ Administration Briefly Described&mdash;The Tchinovniks, or Officials&mdash;Official
+ Titles, and Their Real Significance&mdash;What the Administration Has Done
+ for Russia in the Past&mdash;Its Character Determined by the Peculiar
+ Relation between the Government and the People&mdash;Its Radical Vices&mdash;Bureaucratic
+ Remedies&mdash;Complicated Formal Procedure&mdash;The Gendarmerie: My
+ Personal Relations with this Branch of the Administration; Arrest and
+ Release&mdash;A Strong, Healthy Public Opinion the Only Effectual Remedy
+ for Bad Administration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My administrative studies were begun in Novgorod. One of my reasons for
+ spending a winter in that provincial capital was that I might study the
+ provincial administration, and as soon as I had made the acquaintance of
+ the leading officials I explained to them the object I had in view. With
+ the kindly bonhomie which distinguishes the Russian educated classes, they
+ all volunteered to give me every assistance in their power, but some of
+ them, on mature reflection, evidently saw reason to check their first
+ generous impulse. Among these was the Vice-Governor, a gentleman of German
+ origin, and therefore more inclined to be pedantic than a genuine Russian.
+ When I called on him one evening and reminded him of his friendly offer, I
+ found to my surprise that he had in the meantime changed his mind. Instead
+ of answering my first simple inquiry, he stared at me fixedly, as if for
+ the purpose of detecting some covert, malicious design, and then, putting
+ on an air of official dignity, informed me that as I had not been
+ authorised by the Minister to make these investigations, he could not
+ assist me, and would certainly not allow me to examine the archives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was not encouraging, but it did not prevent me from applying to the
+ Governor, and I found him a man of a very different stamp. Delighted to
+ meet a foreigner who seemed anxious to study seriously in an unbiassed
+ frame of mind the institutions of his much-maligned native country, he
+ willingly explained to me the mechanism of the administration which he
+ directed and controlled, and kindly placed at my disposal the books and
+ documents in which I could find the historical and practical information
+ which I required.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This friendly attitude of his Excellency towards me soon became generally
+ known in the town, and from that moment my difficulties were at an end.
+ The minor officials no longer hesitated to initiate me into the mysteries
+ of their respective departments, and at last even the Vice-Governor threw
+ off his reserve and followed the example of his colleagues. The elementary
+ information thus acquired I had afterwards abundant opportunities of
+ completing by observation and study in other parts of the Empire, and I
+ now propose to communicate to the reader a few of the more general
+ results.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gigantic administrative machine which holds together all the various
+ parts of the vast Empire has been gradually created by successive
+ generations, but we may say roughly that it was first designed and
+ constructed by Peter the Great. Before his time the country was governed
+ in a rude, primitive fashion. The Grand Princes of Moscow, in subduing
+ their rivals and annexing the surrounding principalities, merely cleared
+ the ground for a great homogeneous State. Wily, practical politicians,
+ rather than statesmen of the doctrinaire type, they never dreamed of
+ introducing uniformity and symmetry into the administration as a whole.
+ They developed the ancient institutions so far as these were useful and
+ consistent with the exercise of autocratic power, and made only such
+ alterations as practical necessity demanded. And these necessary
+ alterations were more frequently local than general. Special decisions,
+ instruction to particular officials, and charters for particular communes
+ of proprietors were much more common than general legislative measures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short, the old Muscovite Tsars practised a hand-to-mouth policy,
+ destroying whatever caused temporary inconvenience, and giving little heed
+ to what did not force itself upon their attention. Hence, under their rule
+ the administration presented not only territorial peculiarities, but also
+ an ill-assorted combination of different systems in the same district&mdash;a
+ conglomeration of institutions belonging to different epochs, like a fleet
+ composed of triremes, three-deckers, and iron-clads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This irregular system, or rather want of system, seemed highly
+ unsatisfactory to the logical mind of Peter the Great, and he conceived
+ the grand design of sweeping it away, and putting in its place a
+ symmetrical bureaucratic machine. It is scarcely necessary to say that
+ this magnificent project, so foreign to the traditional ideas and customs
+ of the people, was not easily realised. Imagine a man, without technical
+ knowledge, without skilled workmen, without good tools, and with no better
+ material than soft, crumbling sandstone, endeavouring to build a palace on
+ a marsh! The undertaking would seem to reasonable minds utterly absurd,
+ and yet it must be admitted that Peter's project was scarcely more
+ feasible. He had neither technical knowledge, nor the requisite materials,
+ nor a firm foundation to build on. With his usual Titanic energy he
+ demolished the old structure, but his attempts to construct were little
+ more than a series of failures. In his numerous ukazes he has left us a
+ graphic description of his efforts, and it is at once instructive and
+ pathetic to watch the great worker toiling indefatigably at his
+ self-imposed task. His instruments are constantly breaking in his hands.
+ The foundations of the building are continually giving way, and the lower
+ tiers crumbling under the superincumbent weight. Now and then a whole
+ section is found to be unsuitable, and is ruthlessly pulled down, or falls
+ of its own accord. And yet the builder toils on, with a perseverance and
+ an energy of purpose that compel admiration, frankly confessing his
+ mistakes and failures, and patiently seeking the means of remedying them,
+ never allowing a word of despondency to escape him, and never despairing
+ of ultimate success. And at length death comes, and the mighty builder is
+ snatched away suddenly in the midst of his unfinished labours, bequeathing
+ to his successors the task of carrying on the great work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ None of these successors possessed Peter's genius and energy&mdash;with
+ the exception perhaps of Catherine II.&mdash;but they were all compelled
+ by the force of circumstances to adopt his plans. A return to the old
+ rough-and-ready rule of the local Voyevods was impossible. As the
+ Autocratic Power became more and more imbued with Western ideas, it felt
+ more and more the need of new means for carrying them out, and accordingly
+ it strove to systematise and centralise the administration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this change we may perceive a certain analogy with the history of the
+ French administration from the reign of Philippe le Bel to that of Louis
+ XIV. In both countries we see the central power bringing the local
+ administrative organs more and more under its control, till at last it
+ succeeds in creating a thoroughly centralised bureaucratic organisation.
+ But under this superficial resemblance lie profound differences. The
+ French kings had to struggle with provincial sovereignties and feudal
+ rights, and when they had annihilated this opposition they easily found
+ materials with which to build up the bureaucratic structure. The Russian
+ sovereigns, on the contrary, met with no such opposition, but they had
+ great difficulty in finding bureaucratic material amongst their
+ uneducated, undisciplined subjects, notwithstanding the numerous schools
+ and colleges which were founded and maintained simply for the purpose of
+ preparing men for the public service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The administration was thus brought much nearer to the West-European
+ ideal, but some people have grave doubts as to whether it became thereby
+ better adapted to the practical wants of the people for whom it was
+ created. On this point a well-known Slavophil once made to me some remarks
+ which are worthy of being recorded. "You have observed," he said, "that
+ till very recently there was in Russia an enormous amount of official
+ peculation, extortion, and misgovernment of every kind, that the courts of
+ law were dens of iniquity, that the people often committed perjury, and
+ much more of the same sort, and it must be admitted that all this has not
+ yet entirely disappeared. But what does it prove? That the Russian people
+ are morally inferior to the German? Not at all. It simply proves that the
+ German system of administration, which was forced upon them without their
+ consent, was utterly unsuited to their nature. If a young growing boy be
+ compelled to wear very tight boots, he will probably burst them, and the
+ ugly rents will doubtless produce an unfavourable impression on the
+ passers-by; but surely it is better that the boots should burst than that
+ the feet should be deformed. Now, the Russian people was compelled to put
+ on not only tight boots, but also a tight jacket, and, being young and
+ vigorous, it burst them. Narrow-minded, pedantic Germans can neither
+ understand nor provide for the wants of the broad Slavonic nature."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In its present form the Russian administration seems at first sight a very
+ imposing edifice. At the top of the pyramid stands the Emperor, "the
+ autocratic monarch," as Peter the Great described him, "who has to give an
+ account of his acts to no one on earth, but has power and authority to
+ rule his States and lands as a Christian sovereign according to his own
+ will and judgment." Immediately below the Emperor we see the Council of
+ State, the Committee of Ministers, and the Senate, which represent
+ respectively the legislative, the administrative, and the judicial power.
+ An Englishman glancing over the first volume of the great Code of Laws
+ might imagine that the Council of State is a kind of Parliament, and the
+ Committee of Ministers a cabinet in our sense of the term, but in reality
+ both institutions are simply incarnations of the Autocratic Power. Though
+ the Council is entrusted by law with many important functions&mdash;such
+ as discussing Bills, criticising the annual budget, declaring war and
+ concluding peace&mdash;it has merely a consultative character, and the
+ Emperor is not in any way bound by its decisions. The Committee is not at
+ all a cabinet as we understand the word. The Ministers are directly and
+ individually responsible to the Emperor, and therefore the Committee has
+ no common responsibility or other cohesive force. As to the Senate, it has
+ descended from its high estate. It was originally entrusted with the
+ supreme power during the absence or minority of the monarch, and was
+ intended to exercise a controlling influence in all sections of the
+ administration, but now its activity is restricted to judicial matters,
+ and it is little more than a supreme court of appeal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Immediately below these three institutions stand the Ministries, ten in
+ number. They are the central points in which converge the various kinds of
+ territorial administration, and from which radiates the Imperial will all
+ over the Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the purpose of territorial administration Russia proper&mdash;that is
+ to say, European Russia, exclusive of Poland, the Baltic Provinces,
+ Finland and the Caucasus&mdash;is divided into forty-nine provinces or
+ "Governments" (gubernii), and each Government is subdivided into Districts
+ (uyezdi). The average area of a province is about the size of Portugal,
+ but some are as small as Belgium, whilst one at least is twenty-five times
+ as big. The population, however, does not correspond to the amount of
+ territory. In the largest province, that of Archangel, there are only
+ about 350,000 inhabitants, whilst in two of the smaller ones there are
+ over three millions. The districts likewise vary greatly in size. Some are
+ smaller than Oxfordshire or Buckingham, and others are bigger than the
+ whole of the United Kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Over each province is placed a Governor, who is assisted in his duties by
+ a Vice-Governor and a small council. According to the legislation of
+ Catherine II., which still appears in the Code and has only been partially
+ repealed, the Governor is termed "the steward of the province," and is
+ entrusted with so many and such delicate duties, that in order to obtain
+ qualified men for the post it would be necessary to realise the great
+ Empress's design of creating, by education, "a new race of people." Down
+ to the time of the Crimean War the Governors understood the term
+ "stewards" in a very literal sense, and ruled in a most arbitrary,
+ high-handed style, often exercising an important influence on the civil
+ and criminal tribunals. These extensive and vaguely defined powers have
+ now been very much curtailed, partly by positive legislation, and partly
+ by increased publicity and improved means of communication. All judicial
+ matters have been placed theoretically beyond the Governor's control, and
+ many of his former functions are now fulfilled by the Zemstvo&mdash;the
+ new organ of local self-government. Besides this, all ordinary current
+ affairs are regulated by an already big and ever-growing body of
+ instructions, in the form of Imperial orders and ministerial circulars,
+ and as soon as anything not provided for by the instructions happens to
+ occur, the minister is consulted through the post-office or by telegraph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even within the sphere of their lawful authority the Governors have now a
+ certain respect for public opinion and occasionally a very wholesome dread
+ of casual newspaper correspondents. Thus the men who were formerly
+ described by the satirists as "little satraps" have sunk to the level of
+ subordinate officials. I can confidently say that many (I believe the
+ majority) of them are honest, upright men, who are perhaps not endowed
+ with any unusual administrative capacities, but who perform their duties
+ faithfully according to their lights. If any representatives of the old
+ "satraps" still exist, they must be sought for in the outlying Asiatic
+ provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Independent of the Governor, who is the local representative of the
+ Ministry of the Interior, are a number of resident officials, who
+ represent the other ministries, and each of them has a bureau, with the
+ requisite number of assistants, secretaries, and scribes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To keep this vast and complex bureaucratic machine in motion it is
+ necessary to have a large and well-drilled army of officials. These are
+ drawn chiefly from the ranks of the Noblesse and the clergy, and form a
+ peculiar social class called Tchinovniks, or men with Tchins. As the Tchin
+ plays an important part in Russia, not only in the official world, but
+ also to some extent in social life, it may be well to explain its
+ significance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All offices, civil and military, are, according to a scheme invented by
+ Peter the Great, arranged in fourteen classes or ranks, and to each class
+ or rank a particular name is attached. As promotion is supposed to be
+ given according to personal merit, a man who enters the public service for
+ the first time must, whatever be his social position, begin in the lower
+ ranks, and work his way upwards. Educational certificates may exempt him
+ from the necessity of passing through the lowest classes, and the Imperial
+ will may disregard the restrictions laid down by law; but as general rule
+ a man must begin at or near the bottom of the official ladder, and he must
+ remain on each step a certain specified time. The step on which he is for
+ the moment standing, or, in other words, the official rank or tchin which
+ he possesses determines what offices he is competent to hold. Thus rank or
+ tchin is a necessary condition for receiving an appointment, but it does
+ not designate any actual office, and the names of the different ranks are
+ extremely apt to mislead a foreigner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must always bear this in mind when we meet with those imposing titles
+ which Russian tourists sometimes put on their visiting cards, such as
+ "Conseiller de Cour," "Conseiller d'Etat," "Conseiller prive de S. M.
+ l'Empereur de toutes les Russies." It would be uncharitable to suppose
+ that these titles are used with the intention of misleading, but that they
+ do sometimes mislead there cannot be the least doubt. I shall never forget
+ the look of intense disgust which I once saw on the face of an American
+ who had invited to dinner a "Conseiller de Cour," on the assumption that
+ he would have a Court dignitary as his guest, and who casually discovered
+ that the personage in question was simply an insignificant official in one
+ of the public offices. No doubt other people have had similar experiences.
+ The unwary foreigner who has heard that there is in Russia a very
+ important institution called the "Conseil d'Etat," naturally supposes that
+ a "Conseiller d'Etat" is a member of that venerable body; and if he meets
+ "Son Excellence le Conseiller prive," he is pretty sure to assume&mdash;especially
+ if the word "actuel" has been affixed&mdash;that he sees before him a real
+ living member of the Russian Privy Council. When to the title is added,
+ "de S. M. l'Empereur de toutes les Russies," a boundless field is opened
+ up to the non-Russian imagination. In reality these titles are not nearly
+ so important as they seem. The soi-disant "Conseiller de Cour" has
+ probably nothing to do with the Court. The Conseiller d'Etat is so far
+ from being a member of the Conseil d'Etat that he cannot possibly become a
+ member till he receives a higher tchin.* As to the Privy Councillor, it is
+ sufficient to say that the Privy Council, which had a very odious
+ reputation in its lifetime, died more than a century ago, and has not
+ since been resuscitated. The explanation of these anomalies is to be found
+ in the fact that the Russian tchins, like the German honorary titles&mdash;Hofrath,
+ Staatsrath, Geheimrath&mdash;of which they are a literal translation,
+ indicate not actual office, but simply official rank. Formerly the
+ appointment to an office generally depended on the tchin; now there is a
+ tendency to reverse the old order of things and make the tchin depend upon
+ the office actually held.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * In Russian the two words are quite different; the Council
+ is called Gosudarstvenny sovet, and the title Statski
+ sovetnik.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The reader of practical mind who is in the habit of considering results
+ rather than forms and formalities desires probably no further description
+ of the Russian bureaucracy, but wishes to know simply how it works in
+ practice. What has it done for Russia in the past, and what is it doing in
+ the present?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the present day, when faith in despotic civilisers and paternal
+ government has been rudely shaken, and the advantages of a free,
+ spontaneous national development are fully recognised, centralised
+ bureaucracies have everywhere fallen into bad odour. In Russia the dislike
+ to them is particularly strong, because it has there something more than a
+ purely theoretical basis. The recollection of the reign of Nicholas I.,
+ with its stern military regime, and minute, pedantic formalism, makes many
+ Russians condemn in no measured terms the administration under which they
+ live, and most Englishmen will feel inclined to endorse this condemnation.
+ Before passing sentence, however, we ought to know that the system has at
+ least an historical justification, and we must not allow our love of
+ constitutional liberty and local self-government to blind us to the
+ distinction between theoretical and historical possibility. What seems to
+ political philosophers abstractly the best possible government may be
+ utterly inapplicable in certain concrete cases. We need not attempt to
+ decide whether it is better for humanity that Russia should exist as a
+ nation, but we may boldly assert that without a strongly centralised
+ administration Russia would never have become one of the great European
+ Powers. Until comparatively recent times the part of the world which is
+ known as the Russian Empire was a conglomeration of independent or
+ semi-independent political units, animated with centrifugal as well as
+ centripetal forces; and even at the present day it is far from being a
+ compact homogeneous State. It was the autocratic power, with the
+ centralised administration as its necessary complement, that first created
+ Russia, then saved her from dismemberment and political annihilation, and
+ ultimately secured for her a place among European nations by introducing
+ Western civilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst thus recognising clearly that autocracy and a strongly centralised
+ administration were necessary first for the creation and afterwards for
+ the preservation of national independence, we must not shut our eyes to
+ the evil consequences which resulted from this unfortunate necessity. It
+ was in the nature of things that the Government, aiming at the realisation
+ of designs which its subjects neither sympathised with nor clearly
+ understood, should have become separated from the nation; and the reckless
+ haste and violence with which it attempted to carry out its schemes
+ aroused a spirit of positive opposition among the masses. A considerable
+ section of the people long looked on the reforming Tsars as incarnations
+ of the spirit of evil, and the Tsars in their turn looked upon the people
+ as raw material for the realisation of their political designs. This
+ peculiar relation between the nation and the Government has given the
+ key-note to the whole system of administration. The Government has always
+ treated the people as minors, incapable of understanding its political
+ aims, and only very partially competent to look after their own local
+ affairs. The officials have naturally acted in the same spirit. Looking
+ for direction and approbation merely to their superiors, they have
+ systematically treated those over whom they were placed as a conquered or
+ inferior race. The State has thus come to be regarded as an abstract
+ entity, with interests entirely different from those of the human beings
+ composing it; and in all matters in which State interests are supposed to
+ be involved, the rights of individuals are ruthlessly sacrificed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we remember that the difficulties of centralised administration must be
+ in direct proportion to the extent and territorial variety of the country
+ to be governed, we may readily understand how slowly and imperfectly the
+ administrative machine necessarily works in Russia. The whole of the vast
+ region stretching from the Polar Ocean to the Caspian, and from the shores
+ of the Baltic to the confines of the Celestial Empire, is administered
+ from St. Petersburg. The genuine bureaucrat has a wholesome dread of
+ formal responsibility, and generally tries to avoid it by taking all
+ matters out of the hands of his subordinates, and passing them on to the
+ higher authorities. As soon, therefore, as affairs are caught up by the
+ administrative machine they begin to ascend, and probably arrive some day
+ at the cabinet of the minister. Thus the ministries are flooded with
+ papers&mdash;many of the most trivial import&mdash;from all parts of the
+ Empire; and the higher officials, even if they had the eyes of an Argus
+ and the hands of a Briareus, could not possibly fulfil conscientiously the
+ duties imposed on them. In reality the Russian administrators of the
+ higher ranks recall neither Argus nor Briareus. They commonly show neither
+ an extensive nor a profound knowledge of the country which they are
+ supposed to govern, and seem always to have a fair amount of leisure time
+ at their disposal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the unavoidable evils of excessive centralisation, Russia has had
+ to suffer much from the jobbery, venality, and extortion of the officials.
+ When Peter the Great one day proposed to hang every man who should steal
+ as much as would buy a rope, his Procurator-General frankly replied that
+ if his Majesty put his project into execution there would be no officials
+ left. "We all steal," added the worthy official; "the only difference is
+ that some of us steal larger amounts and more openly than others." Since
+ these words were spoken nearly two centuries have passed, and during all
+ that time Russia has been steadily making progress, but until the
+ accession of Alexander II. in 1855 little change took place in the moral
+ character of the administration. Some people still living can remember the
+ time when they could have repeated, without much exaggeration, the
+ confession of Peter's Procurator-General.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To appreciate aright this ugly phenomenon we must distinguish two kinds of
+ venality. On the one hand there was the habit of exacting what are
+ vulgarly termed "tips" for services performed, and on the other there were
+ the various kinds of positive dishonesty. Though it might not be always
+ easy to draw a clear line between the two categories, the distinction was
+ fully recognised in the moral consciousness of the time, and many an
+ official who regularly received "sinless revenues" (bezgreshniye dokhodi),
+ as the tips were sometimes called, would have been very indignant had he
+ been stigmatised as a dishonest man. The practice was, in fact, universal,
+ and could be, to a certain extent, justified by the smallness of the
+ official salaries. In some departments there was a recognised tariff. The
+ "brandy farmers," for example, who worked the State Monopoly for the
+ manufacture and sale of alcoholic liquors, paid regularly a fixed sum to
+ every official, from the Governor to the policeman, according to his rank.
+ I knew of one case where an official, on receiving a larger sum than was
+ customary, conscientiously handed back the change! The other and more
+ heinous offences were by no means so common, but were still fearfully
+ frequent. Many high officials and important dignitaries were known to
+ receive large revenues, to which the term "sinless" could not by any means
+ be applied, and yet they retained their position, and were received in
+ society with respectful deference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sovereigns were well aware of the abuses, and strove more or less to
+ root them out, but the success which attended their efforts does not give
+ us a very exalted idea of the practical omnipotence of autocracy. In a
+ centralised bureaucratic administration, in which each official is to a
+ certain extent responsible for the sins of his subordinates, it is always
+ extremely difficult to bring an official culprit to justice, for he is
+ sure to be protected by his superiors; and when the superiors are
+ themselves habitually guilty of malpractices, the culprit is quite safe
+ from exposure and punishment. The Tsar, indeed, might do much towards
+ exposing and punishing offenders if he could venture to call in public
+ opinion to his assistance, but in reality he is very apt to become a party
+ to the system of hushing up official delinquencies. He is himself the
+ first official in the realm, and he knows that the abuse of power by a
+ subordinate has a tendency to produce hostility towards the fountain of
+ all official power. Frequent punishment of officials might, it is thought,
+ diminish public respect for the Government, and undermine that social
+ discipline which is necessary for the public tranquillity. It is therefore
+ considered expedient to give to official delinquencies as little publicity
+ as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides this, strange as it may seem, a Government which rests on the
+ arbitrary will of a single individual is, notwithstanding occasional
+ outbursts of severity, much less systematically severe than authority
+ founded on free public opinion. When delinquencies occur in very high
+ places the Tsar is almost sure to display a leniency approaching to
+ tenderness. If it be necessary to make a sacrifice to justice, the
+ sacrificial operation is made as painless as may be, and illustrious
+ scapegoats are not allowed to die of starvation in the wilderness&mdash;the
+ wilderness being generally Paris or the Riviera. This fact may seem
+ strange to those who are in the habit of associating autocracy with
+ Neapolitan dungeons and the mines of Siberia, but it is not difficult to
+ explain. No individual, even though he be the Autocrat of all the Russias,
+ can so case himself in the armour of official dignity as to be completely
+ proof against personal influences. The severity of autocrats is reserved
+ for political offenders, against whom they naturally harbour a feeling of
+ personal resentment. It is so much easier for us to be lenient and
+ charitable towards a man who sins against public morality than towards one
+ who sins against ourselves!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In justice to the bureaucratic reformers in Russia, it must be said that
+ they have preferred prevention to cure. Refraining from all Draconian
+ legislation, they have put their faith in a system of ingenious checks and
+ a complicated formal procedure. When we examine the complicated
+ formalities and labyrinthine procedure by which the administration is
+ controlled, our first impression is that administrative abuses must be
+ almost impossible. Every possible act of every official seems to have been
+ foreseen, and every possible outlet from the narrow path of honesty seems
+ to have been carefully walled up. As the English reader has probably no
+ conception of formal procedure in a highly centralised bureaucracy, let me
+ give, by way of illustration, an instance which accidentally came to my
+ knowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the residence of a Governor-General one of the stoves is in need of
+ repairs. An ordinary mortal may assume that a man with the rank of
+ Governor-General may be trusted to expend a few shillings conscientiously,
+ and that consequently his Excellency will at once order the repairs to be
+ made and the payment to be put down among the petty expenses. To the
+ bureaucratic mind the case appears in a very different light. All possible
+ contingencies must be carefully provided for. As a Governor-General may
+ possibly be possessed with a mania for making useless alterations, the
+ necessity for the repairs ought to be verified; and as wisdom and honesty
+ are more likely to reside in an assembly than in an individual, it is well
+ to entrust the verification to a council. A council of three or four
+ members accordingly certifies that the repairs are necessary. This is
+ pretty strong authority, but it is not enough. Councils are composed of
+ mere human beings, liable to error and subject to be intimidated by a
+ Governor-General. It is prudent, therefore, to demand that the decision of
+ the council be confirmed by the Procureur, who is directly subordinated to
+ the Minister of Justice. When this double confirmation has been obtained,
+ an architect examines the stove, and makes an estimate. But it would be
+ dangerous to give carte blanche to an architect, and therefore the
+ estimate has to be confirmed, first by the aforesaid council and
+ afterwards by the Procureur. When all these formalities&mdash;which
+ require sixteen days and ten sheets of paper&mdash;have been duly
+ observed, his Excellency is informed that the contemplated repairs will
+ cost two roubles and forty kopecks, or about five shillings of our money.
+ Even here the formalities do not stop, for the Government must have the
+ assurance that the architect who made the estimate and superintended the
+ repairs has not been guilty of negligence. A second architect is therefore
+ sent to examine the work, and his report, like the estimate, requires to
+ be confirmed by the council and the Procureur. The whole correspondence
+ lasts thirty days, and requires no less than thirty sheets of paper! Had
+ the person who desired the repairs been not a Governor-General, but an
+ ordinary mortal, it is impossible to say how long the procedure might have
+ lasted.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * In fairness I feel constrained to add that incidents of
+ this kind occasionally occur&mdash;or at least occurred as late
+ as 1886&mdash;in our Indian Administration. I remember an
+ instance of a pane of glass being broken in the Viceroy's
+ bedroom in the Viceregal Lodge at Simla, and it would have
+ required nearly a week, if the official procedure had been
+ scrupulously observed, to have it replaced by the Public
+ Works Department.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It might naturally be supposed that this circuitous and complicated
+ method, with its registers, ledgers, and minutes of proceedings, must at
+ least prevent pilfering; but this a priori conclusion has been
+ emphatically belied by experience. Every new ingenious device had merely
+ the effect of producing a still more ingenious means of avoiding it. The
+ system did not restrain those who wished to pilfer, and it had a
+ deleterious effect on honest officials by making them feel that the
+ Government reposed no confidence in them. Besides this, it produced among
+ all officials, honest and dishonest alike, the habit of systematic
+ falsification. As it was impossible for even the most pedantic of men&mdash;and
+ pedantry, be it remarked, is a rare quality among Russians&mdash;to fulfil
+ conscientiously all the prescribed formalities, it became customary to
+ observe the forms merely on paper. Officials certified facts which they
+ never dreamed of examining, and secretaries gravely wrote the minutes of
+ meetings that had never been held! Thus, in the case above cited, the
+ repairs were in reality begun and ended long before the architect was
+ officially authorised to begin the work. The comedy was nevertheless
+ gravely played out to the end, so that any one afterwards revising the
+ documents would have found that everything had been done in perfect order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps the most ingenious means for preventing administrative abuses was
+ devised by the Emperor Nicholas I. Fully aware that he was regularly and
+ systematically deceived by the ordinary officials, he formed a body of
+ well-paid officers, called the gendarmerie, who were scattered over the
+ country, and ordered to report directly to his Majesty whatever seemed to
+ them worthy of attention. Bureaucratic minds considered this an admirable
+ expedient; and the Tsar confidently expected that he would, by means of
+ these official observers who had no interest in concealing the truth, be
+ able to know everything, and to correct all official abuses. In reality
+ the institution produced few good results, and in some respects had a very
+ pernicious influence. Though picked men and provided with good salaries,
+ these officers were all more or less permeated with the prevailing spirit.
+ They could not but feel that they were regarded as spies and informers&mdash;a
+ humiliating conviction, little calculated to develop that feeling of
+ self-respect which is the main foundation of uprightness&mdash;and that
+ all their efforts could do but little good. They were, in fact, in pretty
+ much the same position as Peter's Procurator-General, and, with true
+ Russian bonhomie, they disliked ruining individuals who were no worse than
+ the majority of their fellows. Besides this, according to the received
+ code of official morality insubordination was a more heinous sin than
+ dishonesty, and political offences were regarded as the blackest of all.
+ The gendarmerie officers shut their eyes, therefore, to the prevailing
+ abuses, which were believed to be incurable, and directed their attention
+ to real or imaginary political delinquencies. Oppression and extortion
+ remained unnoticed, whilst an incautious word or a foolish joke at the
+ expense of the Government was too often magnified into an act of high
+ treason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This force still exists under a slightly modified form. Towards the close
+ of the reign of Alexander II. (1880), when Count Loris Melikof, with the
+ sanction and approval of his august master, was preparing to introduce a
+ system of liberal political reforms, it was intended to abolish the
+ gendarmerie as an organ of political espionage, and accordingly the
+ direction of it was transferred from the so-called Third Section of his
+ Imperial Majesty's Chancery to the Ministry of the Interior; but when the
+ benevolent monarch was a few months afterwards assassinated by
+ revolutionists, the project was naturally abandoned, and the Corps of
+ Gendarmes, while remaining nominally under the Minister of the Interior,
+ was practically reinstated in its former position. Now, as then, it serves
+ as a kind of supplement to the ordinary police, and is generally employed
+ for matters in which secrecy is required. Unfortunately it is not bound by
+ those legal restrictions which protect the public against the arbitrary
+ will of the ordinary authorities. In addition to its regular duties it has
+ a vaguely defined roving commission to watch and arrest all persons who
+ seem to it in any way dangerous or suspectes, and it may keep such in
+ confinement for an indefinite time, or remove them to some distant and
+ inhospitable part of the Empire, without making them undergo a regular
+ trial. It is, in short, the ordinary instrument for punishing political
+ dreamers, suppressing secret societies, counteracting political
+ agitations, and in general executing the extra-legal orders of the
+ Government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My relations with this anomalous branch of the administration were
+ somewhat peculiar. After my experience with the Vice-Governor of Novgorod
+ I determined to place myself above suspicion, and accordingly applied to
+ the "Chef des Gendarmes" for some kind of official document which would
+ prove to all officials with whom I might come in contact that I had no
+ illicit designs. My request was granted, and I was furnished with the
+ necessary documents; but I soon found that in seeking to avoid Scylla I
+ had fallen into Charybdis. In calming official suspicions, I inadvertently
+ aroused suspicions of another kind. The documents proving that I enjoyed
+ the protection of the Government made many people suspect that I was an
+ emissary of the gendarmerie, and greatly impeded me in my efforts to
+ collect information from private sources. As the private were for me more
+ important than the official sources of information, I refrained from
+ asking for a renewal of the protection, and wandered about the country as
+ an ordinary unprotected traveller. For some time I had no cause to regret
+ this decision. I knew that I was pretty closely watched, and that my
+ letters were occasionally opened in the post-office, but I was subjected
+ to no further inconvenience. At last, when I had nearly forgotten all
+ about Scylla and Charybdis, I one night unexpectedly ran upon the former,
+ and, to my astonishment, found myself formally arrested! The incident
+ happened in this wise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had been visiting Austria and Servia, and after a short absence returned
+ to Russia through Moldavia. On arriving at the Pruth, which there forms
+ the frontier, I found an officer of gendarmerie, whose duty it was to
+ examine the passports of all passers-by. Though my passport was completely
+ en regle, having been duly vise by the British and Russian Consuls at
+ Galatz, this gentleman subjected me to a searching examination regarding
+ my past life, actual occupation, and intentions for the future. On
+ learning that I had been for more than two years travelling in Russia at
+ my own expense, for the simple purpose of collecting miscellaneous
+ information, he looked incredulous, and seemed to have some doubts as to
+ my being a genuine British subject; but when my statements were confirmed
+ by my travelling companion, a Russian friend who carried awe-inspiring
+ credentials, he countersigned my passport, and allowed us to depart. The
+ inspection of our luggage by the custom-house officers was soon got over;
+ and as we drove off to the neighbouring village where we were to spend the
+ night we congratulated ourselves on having escaped for some time from all
+ contact with the official world. In this we were "reckoning without the
+ host." As the clock struck twelve that night I was roused by a loud
+ knocking at my door, and after a good deal of parley, during which some
+ one proposed to effect an entrance by force, I drew the bolt. The officer
+ who had signed my passport entered, and said, in a stiff, official tone,
+ "I must request you to remain here for twenty-four hours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not a little astonished by this announcement, I ventured to inquire the
+ reason for this strange request.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is my business," was the laconic reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps it is; still you must, on mature consideration, admit that I too
+ have some interest in the matter. To my extreme regret I cannot comply
+ with your request, and must leave at sunrise."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You shall not leave. Give me your passport."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Unless detained by force, I shall start at four o'clock; and as I wish to
+ get some sleep before that time, I must request you instantly to retire.
+ You had the right to stop me at the frontier, but you have no right to
+ come and disturb me in this fashion, and I shall certainly report you. My
+ passport I shall give to none but a regular officer of police."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here followed a long discussion on the rights, privileges, and general
+ character of the gendarmerie, during which my opponent gradually laid
+ aside his dictatorial tone, and endeavoured to convince me that the
+ honourable body to which he belonged was merely an ordinary branch of the
+ administration. Though evidently irritated, he never, I must say,
+ overstepped the bounds of politeness, and seemed only half convinced that
+ he was justified in interfering with my movements. When he found that he
+ could not induce me to give up my passport, he withdrew, and I again lay
+ down to rest; but in about half an hour I was again disturbed. This time
+ an officer of regular police entered, and demanded my "papers." To my
+ inquiries as to the reason of all this disturbance, he replied, in a very
+ polite, apologetic way, that he knew nothing about the reason, but he had
+ received orders to arrest me, and must obey. To him I delivered my
+ passport, on condition that I should receive a written receipt, and should
+ be allowed to telegraph to the British ambassador in St. Petersburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early next morning I telegraphed to the ambassador, and waited impatiently
+ all day for a reply. I was allowed to walk about the village and the
+ immediate vicinity, but of this permission I did not make much use. The
+ village population was entirely Jewish, and Jews in that part of the world
+ have a wonderful capacity for spreading intelligence. By the early morning
+ there was probably not a man, woman, or child in the place who had not
+ heard of my arrest, and many of them felt a not unnatural curiosity to see
+ the malefactor who had been caught by the police. To be stared at as a
+ malefactor is not very agreeable, so I preferred to remain in my room,
+ where, in the company of my friend, who kindly remained with me and made
+ small jokes about the boasted liberty of British subjects, I spent the
+ time pleasantly enough. The most disagreeable part of the affair was the
+ uncertainty as to how many days, weeks, or months I might be detained, and
+ on this point the police-officer would not even hazard a conjecture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The detention came to an end sooner than I expected. On the following day&mdash;that
+ is to say, about thirty-six hours after the nocturnal visit&mdash;the
+ police-officer brought me my passport, and at the same time a telegram
+ from the British Embassy informed me that the central authorities had
+ ordered my release. On my afterwards pertinaciously requesting an
+ explanation of the unceremonious treatment to which I had been subjected,
+ the Minister for Foreign Affairs declared that the authorities expected a
+ person of my name to cross the frontier about that time with a quantity of
+ false bank-notes, and that I had been arrested by mistake. I must confess
+ that this explanation, though official, seemed to me more ingenious than
+ satisfactory, but I was obliged to accept it for what it was worth. At a
+ later period I had again the misfortune to attract the attention of the
+ secret police, but I reserve the incident till I come to speak of my
+ relations with the revolutionists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From all I have seen and heard of the gendarmerie I am disposed to believe
+ that the officers are for the most part polite, well-educated men, who
+ seek to fulfil their disagreeable duties in as inoffensive a way as
+ possible. It must, however, be admitted that they are generally regarded
+ with suspicion and dislike, even by those people who fear the attempts at
+ revolutionary propaganda which it is the special duty of the gendarmerie
+ to discover and suppress. Nor need this surprise us. Though very many
+ people believe in the necessity of capital punishment, there are few who
+ do not feel a decided aversion to the public executioner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only effectual remedy for administrative abuses lies in placing the
+ administration under public control. This has been abundantly proved in
+ Russia. All the efforts of the Tsars during many generations to check the
+ evil by means of ingenious bureaucratic devices proved utterly fruitless.
+ Even the iron will and gigantic energy of Nicholas I. were insufficient
+ for the task. But when, after the Crimean War, there was a great moral
+ awakening, and the Tsar called the people to his assistance, the stubborn,
+ deep-rooted evils immediately disappeared. For a time venality and
+ extortion were unknown, and since that period they have never been able to
+ regain their old force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the present moment it cannot be said that the administration is
+ immaculate, but it is incomparably purer than it was in old times. Though
+ public opinion is no longer so powerful as it was in the early sixties, it
+ is still strong enough to repress many malpractices which in the time of
+ Nicholas I. and his predecessors were too frequent to attract attention.
+ On this subject I shall have more to say hereafter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If administrative abuses are rife in the Empire of the Tsars, it is not
+ from any want of carefully prepared laws. In no country in the world,
+ perhaps, is the legislation more voluminous, and in theory, not only the
+ officials, but even the Tsar himself, must obey the laws he has
+ sanctioned, like the meanest of his subjects. This is one of those cases,
+ not infrequent in Russia, in which theory differs somewhat from practice.
+ In real life the Emperor may at any moment override the law by means of
+ what is called a Supreme Command (vysotchaishiye povelenie), and a
+ minister may "interpret" a law in any way he pleases by means of a
+ circular. This is a frequent cause of complaint even among those who wish
+ to uphold the Autocratic Power. In their opinion law-respecting autocracy
+ wielded by a strong Tsar is an excellent institution for Russia; it is
+ arbitrary autocracy wielded by irresponsible ministers that they object
+ to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Englishmen may have some difficulty in imagining how laws can come into
+ being without a Parliament or Legislative Chamber of some sort, I shall
+ explain briefly how they are manufactured by the Russian bureaucratic
+ machine without the assistance of representative institutions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When a minister considers that some institution in his branch of the
+ service requires to be reformed, he begins by submitting to the Emperor a
+ formal report on the matter. If the Emperor agrees with his minister as to
+ the necessity for reform, he orders a Commission to be appointed for the
+ purpose of considering the subject and preparing a definite legislative
+ project. The Commission meets and sets to work in what seems a very
+ thorough way. It first studies the history of the institution in Russia
+ from the earliest times downwards&mdash;or rather, it listens to an essay
+ on the subject, especially prepared for the occasion by some official who
+ has a taste for historical studies, and can write in a pleasant style. The
+ next step&mdash;to use a phrase which often occurs in the minutes of such
+ commissions&mdash;consists in "shedding the light of science on the
+ question" (prolit' na dyelo svet nauki). This important operation is
+ performed by preparing a memorial containing the history of similar
+ institutions in foreign countries, and an elaborate exposition of numerous
+ theories held by French and German philosophical jurists. In these
+ memorials it is often considered necessary to include every European
+ country except Turkey, and sometimes the small German States and principal
+ Swiss cantons are treated separately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To illustrate the character of these wonderful productions, let me give an
+ example. From a pile of such papers lying before me I take one almost at
+ random. It is a memorial relating to a proposed reform of benevolent
+ institutions. First I find a philosophical disquisition on benevolence in
+ general; next, some remarks on the Talmud and the Koran; then a reference
+ to the treatment of paupers in Athens after the Peloponnesian War, and in
+ Rome under the emperors: then some vague observations on the Middle Ages,
+ with a quotation that was evidently intended to be Latin; lastly, comes an
+ account of the poor-laws of modern times, in which I meet with "the
+ Anglo-Saxon domination," King Egbert, King Ethelred, "a remarkable book of
+ Icelandic laws, called Hragas"; Sweden and Norway, France, Holland,
+ Belgium, Prussia, and nearly all the minor German States. The most
+ wonderful thing is that all this mass of historical information, extending
+ from the Talmud to the most recent legislation of Hesse-Darmstadt, is
+ compressed into twenty-one octavo pages! The doctrinal part of the
+ memorandum is not less rich. Many respected names from the literature of
+ Germany, France, and England are forcibly dragged in; and the general
+ conclusion drawn from this mass of raw, undigested materials is believed
+ to be "the latest results of science."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Does the reader suspect that I have here chosen an extremely exceptional
+ case? If so, let us take the next paper in the file. It refers to a
+ project of law regarding imprisonment for debt. On the first page I find
+ references to "the Salic laws of the fifth century," and the "Assises de
+ Jerusalem, A.D 1099." That, I think, will suffice. Let us pass, then, to
+ the next step.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the quintessence of human wisdom and experience has thus been
+ extracted, the commission considers how the valuable product may be
+ applied to Russia, so as to harmonise with the existing general conditions
+ and local peculiarities. For a man of practical mind this is, of course,
+ the most interesting and most important part of the operation, but from
+ Russian legislators it receives comparatively little attention. Very often
+ have I turned to this section of official papers in order to obtain
+ information regarding the actual state of the country, and in every case I
+ have been grievously disappointed. Vague general phrases, founded on a
+ priori reasoning rather than on observation, together with a few
+ statistical tables&mdash;which the cautious investigator should avoid as
+ he would an ambuscade&mdash;are too often all that is to be found. Through
+ the thin veil of pseudo-erudition the real facts are clear enough. These
+ philosophical legislators, who have spent their lives in the official
+ atmosphere of St. Petersburg, know as much about Russia as the genuine
+ cockney knows about Great Britain, and in this part of their work they
+ derive no assistance from the learned German treatises which supply an
+ unlimited amount of historical facts and philosophical speculation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the commission the project passes to the Council of State, where it
+ is certainly examined and criticised, and perhaps modified, but it is not
+ likely to be improved from the practical point of view, because the
+ members of the Council are merely ci-devant members of similar
+ commissions, hardened by a few additional years of official routine. The
+ Council is, in fact, an assembly of tchinovniks who know little of the
+ practical, everyday wants of the unofficial classes. No merchant,
+ manufacturer, or farmer ever enters its sacred precincts, so that its
+ bureaucratic serenity is rarely disturbed by practical objections. It is
+ not surprising, therefore, that it has been known to pass laws which were
+ found at once to be absolutely unworkable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the Council of State the Bill is taken to the Emperor, and he
+ generally begins by examining the signatures. The "Ayes" are in one column
+ and the "Noes" in another. If his Majesty is not specially acquainted with
+ the matter&mdash;and he cannot possibly be acquainted with all the matters
+ submitted to him&mdash;he usually signs with the majority, or on the side
+ where he sees the names of officials in whose judgment he has special
+ confidence; but if he has strong views of his own, he places his signature
+ in whichever column he thinks fit, and it outweighs the signatures of any
+ number of Councillors. Whatever side he supports, that side "has it," and
+ in this way a small minority may be transformed into a majority. When the
+ important question, for example, as to how far classics should be taught
+ in the ordinary schools was considered by the Council, it is said that
+ only two members signed in favour of classical education, which was
+ excessively unpopular at the moment, but the Emperor Alexander III.,
+ disregarding public opinion and the advice of his Councillors, threw his
+ signature into the lighter scale, and the classicists were victorious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ MOSCOW AND THE SLAVOPHILS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Two Ancient Cities&mdash;Kief Not a Good Point for Studying Old Russian
+ National Life&mdash;Great Russians and Little Russians&mdash;Moscow&mdash;Easter
+ Eve in the Kremlin&mdash;Curious Custom&mdash;Anecdote of the Emperor
+ Nicholas&mdash;Domiciliary Visits of the Iberian Madonna&mdash;The Streets
+ of Moscow&mdash;Recent Changes in the Character of the City&mdash;Vulgar
+ Conception of the Slavophils&mdash;Opinion Founded on Personal
+ Acquaintance&mdash;Slavophil Sentiment a Century Ago&mdash;Origin and
+ Development of the Slavophil Doctrine&mdash;Slavophilism Essentially
+ Muscovite&mdash;The Panslavist Element&mdash;The Slavophils and the
+ Emancipation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the last chapter, as in many of the preceding ones, the reader must
+ have observed that at one moment there was a sudden break, almost a
+ solution of continuity, in Russian national life. The Tsardom of Muscovy,
+ with its ancient Oriental costumes and Byzantine traditions, unexpectedly
+ disappears, and the Russian Empire, clad in modern garb and animated with
+ the spirit of modern progress, steps forward uninvited into European
+ history. Of the older civilisation, if civilisation it can be called, very
+ little survived the political transformation, and that little is generally
+ supposed to hover ghostlike around Kief and Moscow. To one or other of
+ these towns, therefore, the student who desires to learn something of
+ genuine old Russian life, untainted by foreign influences, naturally wends
+ his way. For my part I thought first of settling for a time in Kief, the
+ oldest and most revered of Russian cities, where missionaries from
+ Byzantium first planted Christianity on Russian soil, and where thousands
+ of pilgrims still assemble yearly from far and near to prostrate
+ themselves before the Holy Icons in the churches and to venerate the
+ relics of the blessed saints and martyrs in the catacombs of the great
+ monastery. I soon discovered, however, that Kief, though it represents in
+ a certain sense the Byzantine traditions so dear to the Russian people, is
+ not a good point of observation for studying the Russian character. It was
+ early exposed to the ravages of the nomadic tribes of the Steppe, and when
+ it was liberated from those incursions it was seized by the Poles and
+ Lithuanians, and remained for centuries under their domination. Only in
+ comparatively recent times did it begin to recover its Russian character&mdash;a
+ university having been created there for that purpose after the Polish
+ insurrection of 1830. Even now the process of Russification is far from
+ complete, and the Russian elements in the population are far from being
+ pure in the nationalist sense. The city and the surrounding country are,
+ in fact, Little Russian rather than Great Russian, and between these two
+ sections of the population there are profound differences&mdash;differences
+ of language, costume, traditions, popular songs, proverbs, folk-lore,
+ domestic arrangements, mode of life, and Communal organisation. In these
+ and other respects the Little Russians, South Russians, Ruthenes, or
+ Khokhly, as they are variously designated, differ from the Great Russians
+ of the North, who form the predominant factor in the Empire, and who have
+ given to that wonderful structure its essential characteristics. Indeed,
+ if I did not fear to ruffle unnecessarily the patriotic susceptibilities
+ of my Great Russian friends who have a pet theory on this subject, I
+ should say that we have here two distinct nationalities, further apart
+ from each other than the English and the Scotch. The differences are due,
+ I believe, partly to ethnographical peculiarities and partly to historic
+ conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As it was the energetic Great Russian empire-builders and not the
+ half-dreamy, half-astute, sympathetic descendants of the Free Cossacks
+ that I wanted to study, I soon abandoned my idea of settling in the Holy
+ City on the Dnieper, and chose Moscow as my point of observation; and
+ here, during several years, I spent regularly some of the winter months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first few weeks of my stay in the ancient capital of the Tsars were
+ spent in the ordinary manner of intelligent tourists. After mastering the
+ contents of a guide-book I carefully inspected all the officially
+ recognised objects of interest&mdash;the Kremlin, with its picturesque
+ towers and six centuries of historical associations; the Cathedrals,
+ containing the venerated tombs of martyrs, saints, and Tsars; the old
+ churches, with their quaint, archaic, richly decorated Icons; the
+ "Patriarchs' Treasury," rich in jewelled ecclesiastical vestments and
+ vessels of silver and gold; the ancient and the modern palace; the
+ Ethnological Museum, showing the costumes and physiognomy of all the
+ various races in the Empire; the archaeological collections, containing
+ many objects that recall the barbaric splendour of old Muscovy; the
+ picture-gallery, with Ivanof's gigantic picture, in which patriotic
+ Russian critics discover occult merits which place it above anything that
+ Western Europe has yet produced! Of course I climbed up to the top of the
+ tall belfry which rejoices in the name of "Ivan the Great," and looked
+ down on the "gilded domes"* of the churches, and bright green roofs of the
+ houses, and far away, beyond these, the gently undulating country with the
+ "Sparrow Hills," from which Napoleon is said, in cicerone language, to
+ have "gazed upon the doomed city." Occasionally I walked about the bazaars
+ in the hope of finding interesting specimens of genuine native
+ art-industry, and was urgently invited to purchase every conceivable
+ article which I did not want. At midday or in the evening I visited the
+ most noted traktirs, and made the acquaintance of the caviar, sturgeons,
+ sterlets, and other native delicacies for which these institutions are
+ famous&mdash;deafened the while by the deep tones of the colossal
+ barrel-organ, out of all proportion to the size of the room; and in order
+ to see how the common people spent their evenings I looked in at some of
+ the more modest traktirs, and gazed with wonder, not unmixed with fear, at
+ the enormous quantity of weak tea which the inmates consumed.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Allowance must be made here for poetical licence. In
+ reality, very few of the domes are gilt. The great majority
+ of them are painted green, like the roofs of the houses.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Since these first weeks of my sojourn in Moscow more than thirty years
+ have passed, and many of my early impressions have been blurred by time,
+ but one scene remains deeply graven on my memory. It was Easter Eve, and I
+ had gone with a friend to the Kremlin to witness the customary religious
+ ceremonies. Though the rain was falling heavily, an immense number of
+ people had assembled in and around the Cathedral of the Assumption. The
+ crowd was of the most mixed kind. There stood the patient bearded muzhik
+ in his well-worn sheepskin; the big, burly, self-satisfied merchant in his
+ long black glossy kaftan; the noble with fashionable great-coat and
+ umbrella; thinly clad old women shivering in the cold, and bright-eyed
+ young damsels with their warm cloaks drawn closely round them; old men
+ with long beard, wallet, and pilgrim's staff; and mischievous urchins with
+ faces for the moment preternaturally demure. Each right hand, of old and
+ young alike, held a lighted taper, and these myriads of flickering little
+ flames produced a curious illumination, giving to the surrounding
+ buildings a weird picturesqueness which they do not possess in broad
+ daylight. All stood patiently waiting for the announcement of the glad
+ tidings: "He is risen!" As midnight approached, the hum of voices
+ gradually ceased, till, as the clock struck twelve, the deep-toned bell on
+ "Ivan the Great" began to toll, and in answer to this signal all the bells
+ in Moscow suddenly sent forth a merry peal. Each bell&mdash;and their name
+ is legion&mdash;seemed frantically desirous of drowning its neighbour's
+ voice, the solemn boom of the great one overhead mingling curiously with
+ the sharp, fussy "ting-a-ting-ting" of diminutive rivals. If demons dwell
+ in Moscow and dislike bell-ringing, as is generally supposed, then there
+ must have been at that moment a general stampede of the powers of darkness
+ such as is described by Milton in his poem on the Nativity, and as if this
+ deafening din were not enough, big guns were fired in rapid succession
+ from a battery of artillery close at hand! The noise seemed to stimulate
+ the religious enthusiasm, and the general excitement had a wonderful
+ effect on a Russian friend who accompanied me. When in his normal
+ condition that gentleman was a quiet, undemonstrative person, devoted to
+ science, an ardent adherent of Western civilisation in general and of
+ Darwinism in particular, and a thorough sceptic with regard to all forms
+ of religious belief; but the influence of the surroundings was too much
+ for his philosophical equanimity. For a moment his orthodox Muscovite soul
+ awoke from its sceptical, cosmopolitan lethargy. After crossing himself
+ repeatedly&mdash;an act of devotion which I had never before seen him
+ perform&mdash;he grasped my arm, and, pointing to the crowd, said in an
+ exultant tone of voice, "Look there! There is a sight that you can see
+ nowhere but in the 'White-stone City.'* Are not the Russians a religious
+ people?"
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ *Belokamenny, meaning "of white stone," is one of the
+ popular names of Moscow.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ To this unexpected question I gave a monosyllabic assent, and refrained
+ from disturbing my friend's new-born enthusiasm by any discordant note;
+ but I must confess that this sudden outburst of deafening noise and the
+ dazzling light aroused in my heretical breast feelings of a warlike rather
+ than a religious kind. For a moment I could imagine myself in ancient
+ Moscow, and could fancy the people being called out to repel a Tartar
+ horde already thundering at the gates!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The service lasted two or three hours, and terminated with the curious
+ ceremony of blessing the Easter cakes, which were ranged&mdash;each one
+ with a lighted taper stuck in it&mdash;in long rows outside of the
+ cathedral. A not less curious custom practised at this season is that of
+ exchanging kisses of fraternal love. Theoretically one ought to embrace
+ and be embraced by all present&mdash;indicating thereby that all are
+ brethren in Christ&mdash;but the refinements of modern life have made
+ innovations in the practice, and most people confine their salutations to
+ their friends and acquaintances. When two friends meet during that night
+ or on the following day, the one says, "Christos voskres!" ("Christ hath
+ risen!"); and the other replies, "Vo istine voskres!" ("In truth he hath
+ risen!"). They then kiss each other three times on the right and left
+ cheek alternately. The custom is more or less observed in all classes of
+ society, and the Emperor himself conforms to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This reminds me of an anecdote which is related of the Emperor Nicholas
+ I., tending to show that he was not so devoid of kindly human feelings as
+ his imperial and imperious exterior suggested. On coming out of his
+ cabinet one Easter morning he addressed to the soldier who was mounting
+ guard at the door the ordinary words of salutation, "Christ hath risen!"
+ and received instead of the ordinary reply, a flat contradiction&mdash;"Not
+ at all, your Imperial Majesty!" Astounded by such an unexpected answer&mdash;for
+ no one ventured to dissent from Nicholas even in the most guarded and
+ respectful terms&mdash;he instantly demanded an explanation. The soldier,
+ trembling at his own audacity, explained that he was a Jew, and could not
+ conscientiously admit the fact of the Resurrection. This boldness for
+ conscience' sake so pleased the Tsar that he gave the man a handsome
+ Easter present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A quarter of a century after the Easter Eve above mentioned&mdash;or, to
+ be quite accurate, on the 26th of May, 1896&mdash;I again find myself in
+ the Kremlin on the occasion of a great religious ceremony&mdash;a ceremony
+ which shows that "the White-stone City" on the Moskva is still in some
+ respects the capital of Holy Russia. This time my post of observation is
+ inside the cathedral, which is artistically draped with purple hangings
+ and crowded with the most distinguished personages of the Empire, all
+ arrayed in gorgeous apparel&mdash;Grand Dukes and Grand Duchesses,
+ Imperial Highnesses and High Excellencies, Metropolitans and Archbishops,
+ Senators and Councillors of State, Generals and Court dignitaries. In the
+ centre of the building, on a high, richly decorated platform, sits the
+ Emperor with his Imperial Consort, and his mother, the widowed Consort of
+ Alexander III. Though Nicholas II. has not the colossal stature which has
+ distinguished so many of the Romanofs, he is well built, holds himself
+ erect, and shows a quiet dignity in his movements; while his face, which
+ resembles that of his cousin, the Prince of Wales, wears a kindly,
+ sympathetic expression. The Empress looks even more than usually
+ beautiful, in a low dress cut in the ancient fashion, her thick brown
+ hair, dressed most simply without jewellery or other ornaments, falling in
+ two long ringlets over her white shoulders. For the moment, her attire is
+ much simpler than that of the Empress Dowager, who wears a diamond crown
+ and a great mantle of gold brocade, lined and edged with ermine, the long
+ train displaying in bright-coloured embroidery the heraldic double-headed
+ eagle of the Imperial arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each of these august personages sits on a throne of curious workmanship,
+ consecrated by ancient historic associations. That of the Emperor, the
+ gift of the Shah of Persia to Ivan the Terrible, and commonly called the
+ Throne of Tsar Michael, the founder of the Romanof dynasty, is covered
+ with gold plaques, and studded with hundreds of big, roughly cut precious
+ stones, mostly rubies, emeralds, and turquoises. Of still older date is
+ the throne of the young Empress, for it was given by Pope Paul II. to Tsar
+ Ivan III., grandfather of the Terrible, on the occasion of his marriage
+ with a niece of the last Byzantine Emperor. More recent but not less
+ curious is that of the Empress Dowager. It is the throne of Tsar Alexis,
+ the father of Peter the Great, covered with countless and priceless
+ diamonds, rubies, and pearls, and surmounted by an Imperial eagle of solid
+ gold, together with golden statuettes of St. Peter and St. Nicholas, the
+ miracle-worker. Over each throne is a canopy of purple velvet fringed with
+ gold, out of which rise stately plumes representing the national colours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their Majesties have come hither, in accordance with time-honoured custom,
+ to be crowned in this old Cathedral of the Assumption, the central point
+ of the Kremlin, within a stone-throw of the Cathedral of the Archangel
+ Michael, in which lie the remains of the old Grand Dukes and Tsars of
+ Muscovy. Already the Emperor has read aloud, in a clear, unfaltering
+ voice, from a richly bound parchment folio, held by the Metropolitan of
+ St. Petersburg, the Orthodox creed; and his Eminence, after invoking on
+ his Majesty the blessing of the Holy Spirit, has performed the mystic rite
+ of placing his hands in the form of a cross on the Imperial forehead. Thus
+ all is ready for the most important part of the solemn ceremony. Standing
+ erect, the Emperor doffs his small diadem and puts on with his own hands
+ the great diamond crown, offered respectfully by the Metropolitan; then he
+ reseats himself on his throne, holding in his right hand the Sceptre and
+ in his left the Orb of Dominion. After sitting thus in state for a few
+ minutes, he stands up and proceeds to crown his august spouse, kneeling
+ before him. First he touches her forehead with his own crown, and then he
+ places on her head a smaller one, which is immediately attached to her
+ hair by four ladies-in-waiting, dressed in the old Muscovite
+ Court-costume. At the same time her Majesty is invested with a mantle of
+ heavy gold brocade, similar to those of the Emperor and Empress Dowager,
+ lined and bordered with ermine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus crowned and robed their Majesties sit in state, while a proto-deacon
+ reads, in a loud stentorian voice, the long list of sonorous hereditary
+ titles belonging of right to the Imperator and Autocrat of all the
+ Russias, and the choir chants a prayer invoking long life and happiness&mdash;"Many
+ years! Many years! Many years!"&mdash;on the high and mighty possessor of
+ the titles aforesaid. And now begins the Mass, celebrated with a pomp and
+ magnificence that can be witnessed only once or twice in a generation.
+ Sixty gorgeously robed ecclesiastical dignitaries of the highest orders
+ fulfil their various functions with due solemnity and unction; but the
+ magnificence of the vestments and the pomp of the ceremonial are soon
+ forgotten in the exquisite solemnising music, as the deep double-bass
+ tones of the adult singers in the background&mdash;carefully selected for
+ the occasion in all parts of the Empire&mdash;peal forth as from a great
+ organ, and blend marvellously with the clear, soft, gentle notes of the
+ red-robed chorister boys in front of the Iconostase. Listening with
+ intense emotion, I involuntarily recall to mind Fra Angelico's pictures of
+ angelic choirs, and cannot help thinking that the pious old Florentine,
+ whose soul was attuned to all that was sacred and beautiful, must have
+ heard in imagination such music as this. So strong is the impression that
+ the subsequent details of the long ceremony, including the anointing with
+ the holy chrism, fail to engrave themselves on my memory. One incident,
+ however, remains; and if it had happened in an earlier and more
+ superstitious age it would doubtless have been chronicled as an omen full
+ of significance. As the Emperor is on the point of descending from the
+ dais, duly crowned and anointed, a staggering ray of sunshine steals
+ through one of the narrow upper windows and, traversing the dimly lit
+ edifice, falls full on the Imperial crown, lighting up for a moment the
+ great mass of diamonds with a hundredfold brilliance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a detailed account of the Coronation which I wrote on leaving the
+ Kremlin, I find the following: "The magnificent ceremony is at an end, and
+ now Nicholas II. is the crowned Emperor and anointed Autocrat of all the
+ Russias. May the cares of Empire rest lightly on him! That must be the
+ earnest prayer of every loyal subject and every sincere well-wisher, for
+ of all living mortals he is perhaps the one who has been entrusted by
+ Providence with the greatest power and the greatest responsibilities." In
+ writing those words I did not foresee how heavy his responsibilities would
+ one day weigh upon him, when his Empire would be sorely tried, by foreign
+ war and internal discontent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One more of these old Moscow reminiscences, and I have done. A day or two
+ after the Coronation I saw the Khodinskoye Polye, a great plain in the
+ outskirts of Moscow, strewn with hundreds of corpses! During the previous
+ night enormous crowds from the city and the surrounding districts had
+ collected here in order to receive at sunrise, by the Tsar's command, a
+ little memento of the coronation ceremony, in the form of a packet
+ containing a metal cup and a few eatables; and as day dawned, in their
+ anxiety to get near the row of booths from which the distribution was to
+ be made, about two thousand had been crushed to death. It was a sight more
+ horrible than a battlefield, because among the dead were a large
+ proportion of women and children, terribly mutilated in the struggle.
+ Altogether, "a sight to shudder at, not to see!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To return to the remark of my friend in the Kremlin on Easter Eve, the
+ Russians in general, and the Muscovites in particular, as the quintessence
+ of all that is Russian, are certainly a religious people, but their piety
+ sometimes finds modes of expression which rather shock the Protestant
+ mind. As an instance of these, I may mention the domiciliary visits of the
+ Iberian Madonna. This celebrated Icon, for reasons which I have never
+ heard satisfactorily explained, is held in peculiar veneration by the
+ Muscovites, and occupies in popular estimation a position analogous to the
+ tutelary deities of ancient pagan cities. Thus when Napoleon was about to
+ enter the city in 1812, the populace clamorously called upon the
+ Metropolitan to take the Madonna, and lead them out armed with hatchets
+ against the hosts of the infidel; and when the Tsar visits Moscow he
+ generally drives straight from the railway-station to the little chapel
+ where the Icon resides&mdash;near one of the entrances to the Kremlin&mdash;and
+ there offers up a short prayer. Every Orthodox Russian, as he passes this
+ chapel, uncovers and crosses himself, and whenever a religious service is
+ performed in it there is always a considerable group of worshippers. Some
+ of the richer inhabitants, however, are not content with thus performing
+ their devotions in public before the Icon. They like to have it from time
+ to time in their houses, and the ecclesiastical authorities think fit to
+ humour this strange fancy. Accordingly every morning the Iberian Madonna
+ may be seen driving about the city from one house to another in a carriage
+ and four! The carriage may be at once recognised, not from any peculiarity
+ in its structure, for it is an ordinary close carriage such as may be
+ obtained at livery stables, but by the fact that the coachman sits
+ bare-headed, and all the people in the street uncover and cross themselves
+ as it passes. Arrived at the house to which it has been invited, the Icon
+ is carried through all the rooms, and in the principal apartment a short
+ religious service is performed before it. As it is being brought in or
+ taken away, female servants may sometimes be seen to kneel on the floor so
+ that it may be carried over them. During its absence from its chapel it is
+ replaced by a copy not easily distinguishable from the original, and thus
+ the devotions of the faithful and the flow of pecuniary contributions do
+ not suffer interruption. These contributions, together with the sums paid
+ for the domiciliary visits, amount to a considerable yearly sum, and go&mdash;if
+ I am rightly informed&mdash;to swell the revenues of the Metropolitan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A single drive or stroll through Moscow will suffice to convince the
+ traveller, even if he knows nothing of Russian history, that the city is
+ not, like its modern rival on the Neva, the artificial creation of a
+ far-seeing, self-willed autocrat, but rather a natural product which has
+ grown up slowly and been modified according to the constantly changing
+ wants of the population. A few of the streets have been Europeanised&mdash;in
+ all except the paving, which is everywhere execrably Asiatic&mdash;to suit
+ the tastes of those who have adopted European culture, but the great
+ majority of them still retain much of their ancient character and
+ primitive irregularity. As soon as we diverge from the principal
+ thoroughfares, we find one-storied houses&mdash;some of them still of wood&mdash;which
+ appear to have been transported bodily from the country, with courtyard,
+ garden, stables, and other appurtenances. The whole is no doubt a little
+ compressed, for land has here a certain value, but the character is in no
+ way changed, and we have some difficulty in believing that we are not in
+ the suburbs but near the centre of a great town. There is nothing that can
+ by any possibility be called street architecture. Though there is
+ unmistakable evidence of the streets having been laid out according to a
+ preconceived plan, many of them show clearly that in their infancy they
+ had a wayward will of their own, and bent to the right or left without any
+ topographical justification. The houses, too, display considerable
+ individuality of character, having evidently during the course of their
+ construction paid no attention to their neighbours. Hence we find no
+ regularly built terraces, crescents, or squares. There is, it is true, a
+ double circle of boulevards, but the houses which flank them have none of
+ that regularity which we commonly associate with the term. Dilapidated
+ buildings which in West-European cities would hide themselves in some
+ narrow lane or back slum here stand composedly in the face of day by the
+ side of a palatial residence, without having the least consciousness of
+ the incongruity of their position, just as the unsophisticated muzhik, in
+ his unsavoury sheepskin, can stand in the midst of a crowd of well-dressed
+ people without feeling at all awkward or uncomfortable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this incongruity, however, is speedily disappearing. Moscow has become
+ the centre of a great network of railways, and the commercial and
+ industrial capital of the Empire. Already her rapidly increasing
+ population has nearly reached a million.* The value of land and property
+ is being doubled and trebled, and building speculations, with the aid of
+ credit institutions of various kinds, are being carried on with feverish
+ rapidity. Well may the men of the old school complain that the world is
+ turned upside down, and regret the old times of traditional somnolence and
+ comfortable routine! Those good old times are gone now, never to return.
+ The ancient capital, which long gloried in its past historical
+ associations, now glories in its present commercial prosperity, and looks
+ forward with confidence to the future. Even the Slavophils, the obstinate
+ champions of the ultra-Muscovite spirit, have changed with the times, and
+ descended to the level of ordinary prosaic life. These men, who formerly
+ spent years in seeking to determine the place of Moscow in the past and
+ future history of humanity, have&mdash;to their honour be it said&mdash;become
+ in these latter days town-counsellors, and have devoted much of their time
+ to devising ways and means of improving the drainage and the
+ street-paving! But I am anticipating in a most unjustifiable way. I ought
+ first to tell the reader who these Slavophils were, and why they sought to
+ correct the commonly received conceptions of universal history.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * According to the census of 1897 it was 988,610.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The reader may have heard of the Slavophils as a set of fanatics who,
+ about half a century ago, were wont to go about in what they considered
+ the ancient Russian costume, who wore beards in defiance of Peter the
+ Great's celebrated ukaz and Nicholas's clearly-expressed wish anent
+ shaving, who gloried in Muscovite barbarism, and had solemnly "sworn a
+ feud" against European civilisation and enlightenment. By the tourists of
+ the time who visited Moscow they were regarded as among the most
+ noteworthy lions of the place, and were commonly depicted in not very
+ flattering colours. At the beginning of the Crimean War they were among
+ the extreme Chauvinists who urged the necessity of planting the Greek
+ cross on the desecrated dome of St. Sophia in Constantinople, and hoped to
+ see the Emperor proclaimed "Panslavonic Tsar"; and after the termination
+ of the war they were frequently accused of inventing Turkish atrocities,
+ stirring up discontent among the Slavonic subjects of the Sultan, and
+ secretly plotting for the overthrow of the Ottoman Empire. All this was
+ known to me before I went to Russia, and I had consequently invested the
+ Slavophils with a halo of romance. Shortly after my arrival in St.
+ Petersburg I heard something more which tended to increase my interest in
+ them&mdash;they had caused, I was told, great trepidation among the
+ highest official circles by petitioning the Emperor to resuscitate a
+ certain ancient institution, called Zemskiye Sobory, which might be made
+ to serve the purposes of a parliament! This threw a new light upon them&mdash;under
+ the disguise of archaeological conservatives they were evidently aiming at
+ important liberal reforms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a foreigner and a heretic, I expected a very cold and distant reception
+ from these uncompromising champions of Russian nationality and the
+ Orthodox faith; but in this I was agreeably disappointed. By all of them I
+ was received in the most amiable and friendly way, and I soon discovered
+ that my preconceived ideas of them were very far from the truth. Instead
+ of wild fanatics I found quiet, extremely intelligent, highly educated
+ gentlemen, speaking foreign languages with ease and elegance, and deeply
+ imbued with that Western culture which they were commonly supposed to
+ despise. And this first impression was amply confirmed by subsequent
+ experience during several years of friendly intercourse. They always
+ showed themselves men of earnest character and strong convictions, but
+ they never said or did anything that could justify the appellation of
+ fanatics. Like all philosophical theorists, they often allowed their logic
+ to blind them to facts, but their reasonings were very plausible&mdash;so
+ plausible, indeed, that, had I been a Russian they would have almost
+ persuaded me to be a Slavophil, at least during the time they were talking
+ to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To understand their doctrine we must know something of its origin and
+ development.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The origin of the Slavophil sentiment, which must not be confounded with
+ the Slavophil doctrine, is to be sought in the latter half of the
+ seventeenth century, when the Tsars of Muscovy were introducing
+ innovations in Church and State. These innovations were profoundly
+ displeasing to the people. A large portion of the lower classes, as I have
+ related in a previous chapter, sought refuge in Old Ritualism or
+ sectarianism, and imagined that Tsar Peter, who called himself by the
+ heretical title of "Imperator," was an emanation of the Evil Principle.
+ The nobles did not go quite so far. They remained members of the official
+ Church, and restricted themselves to hinting that Peter was the son, not
+ of Satan, but of a German surgeon&mdash;a lineage which, according to the
+ conceptions of the time, was a little less objectionable; but most of them
+ were very hostile to the changes, and complained bitterly of the new
+ burdens which these changes entailed. Under Peter's immediate successors,
+ when not only the principles of administration but also many of the
+ administrators were German, this hostility greatly increased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So long as the innovations appeared only in the official activity of the
+ Government, the patriotic, conservative spirit was obliged to keep
+ silence; but when the foreign influence spread to the social life of the
+ Court aristocracy, the opposition began to find a literary expression. In
+ the time of Catherine II., when Gallomania was at its height in Court
+ circles, comedies and satirical journals ridiculed those who, "blinded by
+ some externally brilliant gifts of foreigners, not only prefer foreign
+ countries to their native land, but even despise their fellow-countrymen,
+ and think that a Russian ought to borrow all&mdash;even personal
+ character. As if nature arranging all things with such wisdom, and
+ bestowing on all regions the gifts and customs which are appropriate to
+ the climate, had been so unjust as to refuse to the Russians a character
+ of their own! As if she condemned them to wander over all regions, and to
+ adopt by bits the various customs of various nations, in order to compose
+ out of the mixture a new character appropriate to no nation whatever!"
+ Numerous passages of this kind might be quoted, attacking the "monkeyism"
+ and "parrotism" of those who indiscriminately adopted foreign manners and
+ customs&mdash;those who
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Sauntered Europe round,
+ And gathered ev'ry vice in ev'ry ground."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes the terms and metaphors employed were more forcible than
+ refined. One satirical journal, for instance, relates an amusing story
+ about certain little Russian pigs that went to foreign lands to enlighten
+ their understanding, and came back to their country full-grown swine. The
+ national pride was wounded by the thought that Russians could be called
+ "clever apes who feed on foreign intelligence," and many writers, stung by
+ such reproaches, fell into the opposite extreme, discovering unheard-of
+ excellences in the Russian mind and character, and vociferously decrying
+ everything foreign in order to place these imagined excellences in a
+ stronger light by contrast. Even when they recognised that their country
+ was not quite so advanced in civilisation as certain other nations, they
+ congratulated themselves on the fact, and invented by way of justification
+ an ingenious theory, which was afterwards developed by the Slavophils.
+ "The nations of the West," they said, "began to live before us, and are
+ consequently more advanced than we are; but we have on that account no
+ reason to envy them, for we can profit by their errors, and avoid those
+ deep-rooted evils from which they are suffering. He who has just been born
+ is happier than he who is dying."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, we see, a patriotic reaction against the introduction of foreign
+ institutions and the inordinate admiration of foreign culture already
+ existed in Russia more than a century ago. It did not, however, take the
+ form of a philosophical theory till a much later period, when a similar
+ movement was going on in various countries of Western Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the overthrow of the great Napoleonic Empire a reaction against
+ cosmopolitanism took place and a romantic enthusiasm for nationality
+ spread over Europe like an epidemic. Blind, enthusiastic patriotism became
+ the fashionable sentiment of the time. Each nation took to admiring itself
+ complacently, to praising its own character and achievements, and to
+ idealising its historical and mythical past. National peculiarities,
+ "local colour," ancient customs, traditional superstitions&mdash;in short,
+ everything that a nation believed to be specially and exclusively its own,
+ now raised an enthusiasm similar to that which had been formerly excited
+ by cosmopolitan conceptions founded on the law of nature. The movement
+ produced good and evil results. In serious minds it led to a deep and
+ conscientious study of history, national literature, popular mythology,
+ and the like; whilst in frivolous, inflammable spirits it gave birth
+ merely to a torrent of patriotic fervour and rhetorical exaggeration. The
+ Slavophils were the Russian representatives of this nationalistic
+ reaction, and displayed both its serious and its frivolous elements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the most important products of this movement in Germany was the
+ Hegelian theory of universal history. According to Hegel's views, which
+ were generally accepted by those who occupied themselves with
+ philosophical questions, universal history was described as "Progress in
+ the consciousness of freedom" (Fortschritt im Bewusstsein der Freiheit).
+ In each period of the world's history, it was explained, some one nation
+ or race had been intrusted with the high mission of enabling the Absolute
+ Reason, or Weltgeist, to express itself in objective existence, while the
+ other nations and races had for the time no metaphysical justification for
+ their existence, and no higher duty than to imitate slavishly the favoured
+ rival in which the Weltgeist had for the moment chosen to incorporate
+ itself. The incarnation had taken place first in the Eastern Monarchies,
+ then in Greece, next in Rome, and lastly in the Germanic race; and it was
+ generally assumed, if not openly asserted, that this mystical
+ Metempsychosis of the Absolute was now at an end. The cycle of existence
+ was complete. In the Germanic peoples the Weltgeist had found its highest
+ and final expression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russians in general knew nothing about German philosophy, and were
+ consequently not in any way affected by these ideas, but there was in
+ Moscow a small group of young men who ardently studied German literature
+ and metaphysics, and they were much shocked by Hegel's views. Ever since
+ the brilliant reign of Catherine II., who had defeated the Turks and had
+ dreamed of resuscitating the Byzantine Empire, and especially since the
+ memorable events of 1812-15, when Alexander I. appeared as the liberator
+ of enthralled Europe and the arbiter of her destinies, Russians were
+ firmly convinced that their country was destined to play a most important
+ part in human history. Already the great Russian historian Karamzin had
+ declared that henceforth Clio must be silent or accord to Russia a
+ prominent place in the history of the nations. Now, by the Hegelian
+ theory, the whole of the Slav race was left out in the cold, with no high
+ mission, with no new truths to divulge, with nothing better to do, in
+ fact, than to imitate the Germans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The patriotic philosophers of Moscow could not, of course, adopt this
+ view. Whilst accepting the fundamental principles, they declared the
+ theory to be incomplete. The incompleteness lay in the assumption that
+ humanity had already entered on the final stages of its development. The
+ Teutonic nations were perhaps for the moment the leaders in the march of
+ civilisation, but there was no reason to suppose that they would always
+ retain that privileged position. On the contrary, there were already
+ symptoms that their ascendency was drawing to a close. "Western Europe,"
+ it was said, "presents a strange, saddening spectacle. Opinion struggles
+ against opinion, power against power, throne against throne. Science, Art,
+ and Religion, the three chief motors of social life, have lost their
+ force. We venture to make an assertion which to many at present may seem
+ strange, but which will be in a few years only too evident: Western Europe
+ is on the highroad to ruin! We Russians, on the contrary, are young and
+ fresh, and have taken no part in the crimes of Europe. We have a great
+ mission to fulfil. Our name is already inscribed on the tablets of
+ victory, and now we have to inscribe our spirit in the history of the
+ human mind. A higher kind of victory&mdash;the victory of Science, Art and
+ Faith&mdash;awaits us on the ruins of tottering Europe!"*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * These words were written by Prince Odoefski.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This conclusion was supported by arguments drawn from history&mdash;or, at
+ least, what was believed to be history. The European world was represented
+ as being composed of two hemispheres&mdash;the Eastern or Graeco-Slavonic
+ on the one hand, and the Western, or Roman Catholic and Protestant, on the
+ other. These two hemispheres, it was said, are distinguished from each
+ other by many fundamental characteristics. In both of them Christianity
+ formed originally the basis of civilisation, but in the West it became
+ distorted and gave a false direction to the intellectual development. By
+ placing the logical reason of the learned above the conscience of the
+ whole Church, Roman Catholicism produced Protestantism, which proclaimed
+ the right of private judgment and consequently became split up into
+ innumerable sects. The dry, logical spirit which was thus fostered created
+ a purely intellectual, one-sided philosophy, which must end in pure
+ scepticism, by blinding men to those great truths which lie above the
+ sphere of reasoning and logic. The Graeco-Slavonic world, on the contrary,
+ having accepted Christianity not from Rome, but from Byzantium, received
+ pure orthodoxy and true enlightenment, and was thus saved alike from Papal
+ tyranny and from Protestant free-thinking. Hence the Eastern Christians
+ have preserved faithfully not only the ancient dogmas, but also the
+ ancient spirit of Christianity&mdash;that spirit of pious humility,
+ resignation, and brotherly love which Christ taught by precept and
+ example. If they have not yet a philosophy, they will create one, and it
+ will far surpass all previous systems; for in the writings of the Greek
+ Fathers are to be found the germs of a broader, a deeper, and a truer
+ philosophy than the dry, meagre rationalism of the West&mdash;a philosophy
+ founded not on the logical faculty alone, but on the broader basis of
+ human nature as a whole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fundamental characteristics of the Graeco-Slavonic world&mdash;so runs
+ the Slavophil theory&mdash;have been displayed in the history of Russia.
+ Throughout Western Christendom the principal of individual judgment and
+ reckless individual egotism have exhausted the social forces and brought
+ society to the verge of incurable anarchy and inevitable dissolution,
+ whereas the social and political history of Russia has been harmonious and
+ peaceful. It presents no struggles between the different social classes,
+ and no conflicts between Church and State. All the factors have worked in
+ unison, and the development has been guided by the spirit of pure
+ orthodoxy. But in this harmonious picture there is one big, ugly black
+ spot&mdash;Peter, falsely styled "the Great," and his so-called reforms.
+ Instead of following the wise policy of his ancestors, Peter rejected the
+ national traditions and principles, and applied to his country, which
+ belonged to the Eastern world, the principles of Western civilisation. His
+ reforms, conceived in a foreign spirit, and elaborated by men who did not
+ possess the national instincts, were forced upon the nation against its
+ will, and the result was precisely what might have been expected. The
+ "broad Slavonic nature" could not be controlled by institutions which had
+ been invented by narrow-minded, pedantic German bureaucrats, and, like
+ another Samson, it pulled down the building in which foreign legislators
+ sought to confine it. The attempt to introduce foreign culture had a still
+ worse effect. The upper classes, charmed and dazzled by the glare and
+ glitter of Western science, threw themselves impulsively on the newly
+ found treasures, and thereby condemned themselves to moral slavery and
+ intellectual sterility. Fortunately&mdash;and herein lay one of the
+ fundamental principles of the Slavophil doctrine&mdash;the imported
+ civilisation had not at all infected the common people. Through all the
+ changes which the administration and the Noblesse underwent the peasantry
+ preserved religiously in their hearts "the living legacy of antiquity,"
+ the essence of Russian nationality, "a clear spring welling up living
+ waters, hidden and unknown, but powerful."* To recover this lost legacy by
+ studying the character, customs, and institutions of the peasantry, to
+ lead the educated classes back to the path from which they had strayed,
+ and to re-establish that intellectual and moral unity which had been
+ disturbed by the foreign importations&mdash;such was the task which the
+ Slavophils proposed to themselves.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This was one of the favourite themes of Khomiakof, the
+ Slavophil poet and theologian.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Deeply imbued with that romantic spirit which distorted all the
+ intellectual activity of the time, the Slavophils often indulged in the
+ wildest exaggerations, condemning everything foreign and praising
+ everything Russian. When in this mood they saw in the history of the West
+ nothing but violence, slavery, and egotism, and in that of their own
+ country free-will, liberty, and peace. The fact that Russia did not
+ possess free political institutions was adduced as a precious fruit of
+ that spirit of Christian resignation and self-sacrifice which places the
+ Russian at such an immeasurable height above the proud, selfish European;
+ and because Russia possessed few of the comforts and conveniences of
+ common life, the West was accused of having made comfort its God! We need
+ not, however, dwell on these puerilities, which only gained for their
+ authors the reputation of being ignorant, narrow-minded men, imbued with a
+ hatred of enlightenment and desirous of leading their country back to its
+ primitive barbarism. What the Slavophils really condemned, at least in
+ their calmer moments, was not European culture, but the uncritical,
+ indiscriminate adoption of it by their countrymen. Their tirades against
+ foreign culture must appear excusable when we remember that many Russians
+ of the upper ranks could speak and write French more correctly than their
+ native language, and that even the great national poet Pushkin was not
+ ashamed to confess&mdash;what was not true, and a mere piece of
+ affectation&mdash;that "the language of Europe" was more familiar to him
+ than his mother-tongue!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Slavophil doctrine, though it made a great noise in the world, never
+ found many adherents. The society of St. Petersburg regarded it as one of
+ those harmless provincial eccentricities which are always to be found in
+ Moscow. In the modern capital, with its foreign name, its streets and
+ squares on the European model, its palaces and churches in the Renaissance
+ style, and its passionate love of everything French, any attempt to
+ resuscitate the old Boyaric times would have been eminently ridiculous.
+ Indeed, hostility to St. Petersburg and to "the Petersburg period of
+ Russian history" is one of the characteristic traits of genuine
+ Slavophilism. In Moscow the doctrine found a more appropriate home. There
+ the ancient churches, with the tombs of Grand Princes and holy martyrs,
+ the palace in which the Tsars of Muscovy had lived, the Kremlin which had
+ resisted&mdash;not always successfully&mdash;the attacks of savage Tartars
+ and heretical Poles, the venerable Icons that had many a time protected
+ the people from danger, the block of masonry from which, on solemn
+ occasions, the Tsar and the Patriarch had addressed the assembled
+ multitude&mdash;these, and a hundred other monuments sanctified by
+ tradition, have kept alive in the popular memory some vague remembrance of
+ the olden time, and are still capable of awakening antiquarian patriotism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inhabitants, too, have preserved something of the old Muscovite
+ character. Whilst successive sovereigns have been striving to make the
+ country a progressive European empire, Moscow has remained the home of
+ passive conservatism and an asylum for the discontented, especially for
+ the disappointed aspirants to Imperial favour. Abandoned by the modern
+ Emperors, she can glory in her ancient Tsars. But even the Muscovites were
+ not prepared to accept the Slavophil doctrine in the extreme form which it
+ assumed, and were not a little perplexed by the eccentricities of those
+ who professed it. Plain, sensible people, though they might be proud of
+ being citizens of the ancient capital, and might thoroughly enjoy a joke
+ at the expense of St. Petersburg, could not understand a little coterie of
+ enthusiasts who sought neither official rank nor decorations, who slighted
+ many of the conventionalities of the higher classes to which by birth and
+ education they belonged, who loved to fraternise with the common people,
+ and who occasionally dressed in the national costume which had been
+ discarded by the nobles since the time of Peter the Great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Slavophils thus remained merely a small literary party, which probably
+ did not count more than a dozen members, but their influence was out of
+ all proportion to their numbers. They preached successfully the doctrine
+ that the historical development of Russia has been peculiar, that her
+ present social and political organisation is radically different from that
+ of the countries of Western Europe, and that consequently the social and
+ political evils from which she suffers are not to be cured by the remedies
+ which have proved efficacious in France and Germany. These truths, which
+ now appear commonplace, were formerly by no means generally recognised,
+ and the Slavophils deserve credit for directing attention to them. Besides
+ this, they helped to awaken in the upper classes a lively sympathy with
+ the poor, oppressed, and despised peasantry. So long as the Emperor
+ Nicholas lived they had to confine themselves to a purely literary
+ activity; but during the great reforms initiated by his successor,
+ Alexander II., they descended into the arena of practical politics, and
+ played a most useful and honourable part in the emancipation of the serfs.
+ In the new local self-government, too&mdash;the Zemstvo and the new
+ municipal institutions&mdash;they laboured energetically and to good
+ purpose. Of all this I shall have occasion to speak more fully in future
+ chapters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what of their Panslavist aspirations? By their theory they were
+ constrained to pay attention to the Slav race as a whole, but they were
+ more Russian than Slav, and more Muscovite than Russian. The Panslavist
+ element consequently occupied a secondary place in Slavophil doctrine.
+ Though they did much to stimulate popular sympathy with the Southern
+ Slavs, and always cherished the hope that the Serbs, Bulgarians, and
+ cognate Slav nationalities would one day throw off the bondage of the
+ German and the Turk, they never proposed any elaborate project for the
+ solution of the Eastern Question. So far as I was able to gather from
+ their conversation, they seemed to favour the idea of a grand Slavonic
+ Confederation, in which the hegemony would, of course, belong to Russia.
+ In ordinary times the only steps which they took for the realisation of
+ this idea consisted in contributing money for schools and churches among
+ the Slav population of Austria and Turkey, and in educating young
+ Bulgarians in Russia. During the Cretan insurrection they sympathised
+ warmly with the insurgents as co-religionists, but afterwards&mdash;especially
+ during the crisis of the Eastern Question which culminated in the Treaty
+ of San Stefano and the Congress of Berlin (1878)&mdash;their Hellenic
+ sympathies cooled, because the Greeks showed that they had political
+ aspirations inconsistent with the designs of Russia, and that they were
+ likely to be the rivals rather than the allies of the Slavs in the
+ struggle for the Sick Man's inheritance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the time when I was living in Moscow in constant intercourse with
+ the leading Slavophils more than a quarter of a century has passed, and of
+ those with whom I spent so many pleasant evenings discussing the past
+ history and future destinies of the Slav races, not one remains alive. All
+ the great prophets of the old Slavophil doctrine&mdash;Jun Samarin, Prince
+ Tcherkaski, Ivan Aksakof, Kosheleff&mdash;have departed without leaving
+ behind them any genuine disciples. The present generation of Muscovite
+ frondeurs, who continue to rail against Western Europe and the pedantic
+ officialism of St. Petersburg, are of a more modern and less academic
+ type. Their philippics are directed not against Peter the Great and his
+ reforms, but rather against recent Ministers of Foreign Affairs who are
+ thought to have shown themselves too subservient to foreign Powers, and
+ against M. Witte, the late Minister of Finance, who is accused of
+ favouring the introduction of foreign capital and enterprise, and of
+ sacrificing to unhealthy industrial development the interests of the
+ agricultural classes. These laments and diatribes are allowed free
+ expression in private conversation and in the Press, but they do not
+ influence very deeply the policy of the Government or the natural course
+ of events; for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs continues to cultivate
+ friendly relations with the Cabinets of the West, and Moscow is rapidly
+ becoming, by the force of economic conditions, the great industrial and
+ commercial centre of the Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The administrative and bureaucratic centre&mdash;if anything on the
+ frontier of a country can be called its centre&mdash;has long been, and is
+ likely to remain, Peter's stately city at the mouth of the Neva, to which
+ I now invite the reader to accompany me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ ST. PETERSBURG AND EUROPEAN INFLUENCE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ St. Petersburg and Berlin&mdash;Big Houses&mdash;The "Lions"&mdash;Peter
+ the Great&mdash;His Aims and Policy&mdash;The German Regime&mdash;Nationalist
+ Reaction&mdash;French Influence&mdash;Consequent Intellectual Sterility&mdash;Influence
+ of the Sentimental School&mdash;Hostility to Foreign Influences&mdash;A
+ New Period of Literary Importation&mdash;Secret Societies&mdash;The
+ Catastrophe&mdash;The Age of Nicholas&mdash;A Terrible War on Parnassus&mdash;Decline
+ of Romanticism and Transcendentalism&mdash;Gogol&mdash;The Revolutionary
+ Agitation of 1848&mdash;New Reaction&mdash;Conclusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From whatever side the traveller approaches St. Petersburg, unless he goes
+ thither by sea, he must traverse several hundred miles of forest and
+ morass, presenting few traces of human habitation or agriculture. This
+ fact adds powerfully to the first impression which the city makes on his
+ mind. In the midst of a waste howling wilderness, he suddenly comes on a
+ magnificent artificial oasis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the great European cities, the one that most resembles the capital
+ of the Tsars is Berlin. Both are built on perfectly level ground; both
+ have wide, regularly arranged streets; in both there is a general look of
+ stiffness and symmetry which suggests military discipline and German
+ bureaucracy. But there is at least one profound difference. Though Berlin
+ is said by geographers to be built on the Spree, we might live a long time
+ in the city without noticing the sluggish little stream on which the name
+ of a river has been undeservedly conferred. St. Petersburg, on the
+ contrary, is built on a magnificent river, which forms the main feature of
+ the place. By its breadth, and by the enormous volume of its clear, blue,
+ cold water, the Neva is certainly one of the noblest rivers of Europe. A
+ few miles before reaching the Gulf of Finland it breaks up into several
+ streams and forms a delta. It is here that St. Petersburg stands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like the river, everything in St. Petersburg is on a colossal scale. The
+ streets, the squares, the palaces, the public buildings, the churches,
+ whatever may be their defects, have at least the attribute of greatness,
+ and seem to have been designed for the countless generations to come,
+ rather than for the practical wants of the present inhabitants. In this
+ respect the city well represents the Empire of which it is the capital.
+ Even the private houses are built in enormous blocks and divided into many
+ separate apartments. Those built for the working classes sometimes
+ contain, I am assured, more than a thousand inhabitants. How many cubic
+ feet of air is allowed to each person, I do not know; not so many, I fear,
+ as is recommended by the most advanced sanitary authorities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a detailed description of the city I must refer the reader to the
+ guide books. Among its numerous monuments, of which the Russians are
+ justly proud, I confess that the one which interested me most was neither
+ St. Isaac's Cathedral, with its majestic gilded dome, its colossal
+ monolithic columns of red granite, and its gaudy interior; nor the
+ Hermitage, with its magnificent collection of Dutch pictures; nor the
+ gloomy, frowning fortress of St. Peter and St. Paul, containing the tombs
+ of the Emperors. These and other "sights" may deserve all the praise which
+ enthusiastic tourists have lavished upon them, but what made a far deeper
+ impression on me was the little wooden house in which Peter the Great
+ lived whilst his future capital was being built. In its style and
+ arrangement it looks more like the hut of a navvy than the residence of a
+ Tsar, but it was quite in keeping with the character of the illustrious
+ man who occupied it. Peter could and did occasionally work like a navvy
+ without feeling that his Imperial dignity was thereby impaired. When he
+ determined to build a new capital on a Finnish marsh, inhabited chiefly by
+ wildfowl, he did not content himself with exercising his autocratic power
+ in a comfortable arm chair. Like the Greek gods, he went down from his
+ Olympus and took his place in the ranks of ordinary mortals,
+ superintending the work with his own eyes, and taking part in it with his
+ own hands. If he was as arbitrary and oppressive as any of the
+ pyramid-building Pharaohs, he could at least say in self-justification
+ that he did not spare himself any more than his people, but exposed
+ himself freely to the discomforts and dangers under which thousands of his
+ fellow-labourers succumbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In reading the account of Peter's life, written in part by his own pen, we
+ can easily understand how the piously Conservative section of his subjects
+ failed to recognise in him the legitimate successor of the orthodox Tsars.
+ The old Tsars had been men of grave, pompous demeanour, deeply imbued with
+ the consciousness of their semi-religious dignity. Living habitually in
+ Moscow or its immediate neighbourhood, they spent their time in attending
+ long religious services, in consulting with their Boyars, in being present
+ at ceremonious hunting-parties, in visiting the monasteries, and in
+ holding edifying conversations with ecclesiastical dignitaries or revered
+ ascetics. If they undertook a journey, it was probably to make a
+ pilgrimage to some holy shrine; and, whether in Moscow or elsewhere, they
+ were always protected from contact with ordinary humanity by a formidable
+ barricade of court ceremonial. In short, they combined the characters of a
+ Christian monk and of an Oriental potentate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter was a man of an entirely different type, and played in the calm,
+ dignified, orthodox, ceremonious world of Moscow the part of the bull in
+ the china shop, outraging ruthlessly and wantonly all the time-honored
+ traditional conceptions of propriety and etiquette. Utterly regardless of
+ public opinion and popular prejudices, he swept away the old formalities,
+ avoided ceremonies of all kinds, scoffed at ancient usage, preferred
+ foreign secular books to edifying conversations, chose profane heretics as
+ his boon companions, travelled in foreign countries, dressed in heretical
+ costume, defaced the image of God and put his soul in jeopardy by shaving
+ off his beard, compelled his nobles to dress and shave like himself,
+ rushed about the Empire as if goaded on by the demon of unrest, employed
+ his sacred hands in carpentering and other menial occupations, took part
+ openly in the uproarious orgies of his foreign soldiery, and, in short,
+ did everything that "the Lord's anointed" might reasonably be expected not
+ to do. No wonder the Muscovites were scandalised by his conduct, and that
+ some of them suspected he was not the Tsar at all, but Antichrist in
+ disguise. And no wonder he felt the atmosphere of Moscow oppressive, and
+ preferred living in the new capital which he had himself created.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His avowed object in building St. Petersburg was to have "a window by
+ which the Russians might look into civilised Europe"; and well has the
+ city fulfilled its purpose. From its foundation may be dated the European
+ period of Russian history. Before Peter's time Russia belonged to Asia
+ rather than to Europe, and was doubtless regarded by Englishmen and
+ Frenchmen pretty much as we nowadays regard Bokhara or Kashgar; since that
+ time she has formed an integral part of the European political system, and
+ her intellectual history has been but a reflection of the intellectual
+ history of Western Europe, modified and coloured by national character and
+ by peculiar local conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we speak of the intellectual history of a nation we generally mean in
+ reality the intellectual history of the upper classes. With regard to
+ Russia, more perhaps than with regard to any other country, this
+ distinction must always carefully be borne in mind. Peter succeeded in
+ forcing European civilisation on the nobles, but the people remained
+ unaffected. The nation was, as it were, cleft in two, and with each
+ succeeding generation the cleft has widened. Whilst the masses clung
+ obstinately to their time-honoured customs and beliefs, the nobles came to
+ look on the objects of popular veneration as the relics of a barbarous
+ past, of which a civilised nation ought to be ashamed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intellectual movement inaugurated by Peter had a purely practical
+ character. He was himself a thorough utilitarian, and perceived clearly
+ that what his people needed was not theological or philosophical
+ enlightment, but plain, practical knowledge suitable for the requirements
+ of everyday life. He wanted neither theologians nor philosophers, but
+ military and naval officers, administrators, artisans, miners,
+ manufacturers, and merchants, and for this purpose he introduced secular
+ technical education. For the young generation primary schools were
+ founded, and for more advanced pupils the best foreign works on
+ fortification, architecture, navigation, metallurgy, engineering and
+ cognate subjects were translated into the native tongue. Scientific men
+ and cunning artificers were brought into the country, and young Russians
+ were sent abroad to learn foreign languages and the useful arts. In a
+ word, everything was done that seemed likely to raise the Russians to the
+ level of material well-being already attained by the more advanced
+ nations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have here an important peculiarity in the intellectual development of
+ Russia. In Western Europe the modern scientific spirit, being the natural
+ offspring of numerous concomitant historical causes, was born in the
+ natural way, and Society had, consequently, before giving birth to it, to
+ endure the pains of pregnancy and the throes of prolonged labour. In
+ Russia, on the contrary, this spirit appeared suddenly as an adult
+ foreigner, adopted by a despotic paterfamilias. Thus Russia made the
+ transition from mediaeval to modern times without any violent struggle
+ between the old and the new conceptions such as had taken place in the
+ West. The Church, effectually restrained from all active opposition by the
+ Imperial power, preserved unmodified her ancient beliefs; whilst the
+ nobles, casting their traditional conceptions and beliefs to the winds,
+ marched forward unfettered on that path which their fathers and
+ grandfathers had regarded as the direct road to perdition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the first part of Peter's reign Russia was not subjected to the
+ exclusive influence of any one particular country. Thoroughly cosmopolitan
+ in his sympathies, the great reformer, like the Japanese of the present
+ day, was ready to borrow from any foreign nation&mdash;German, Dutch,
+ Danish, or French&mdash;whatever seemed to him to suit his purpose. But
+ soon the geographical proximity to Germany, the annexation of the Baltic
+ Provinces in which the civilisation was German, and intermarriages between
+ the Imperial family and various German dynasties, gave to German influence
+ a decided preponderance. When the Empress Anne, Peter's niece, who had
+ been Duchess of Courland, entrusted the whole administration of the
+ country to her favourite Biron, the German influence became almost
+ exclusive, and the Court, the official world, and the schools were
+ Germanised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The harsh, cruel, tyrannical rule of Biron produced a strong reaction,
+ ending in a revolution, which raised to the throne the Princess Elizabeth,
+ Peter's unmarried daughter, who had lived in retirement and neglect during
+ the German regime. She was expected to rid the country of foreigners, and
+ she did what she could to fulfil the expectations that were entertained of
+ her. With loud protestations of patriotic feelings, she removed the
+ Germans from all important posts, demanded that in future the members of
+ the Academy should be chosen from among born Russians, and gave orders
+ that the Russian youth should be carefully prepared for all kinds of
+ official activity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This attempt to throw off the German bondage did not lead to intellectual
+ independence. During Peter's violent reforms Russia had ruthlessly thrown
+ away her own historic past with whatever germs it contained, and now she
+ possessed none of the elements of a genuine national culture. She was in
+ the position of a fugitive who has escaped from slavery, and, finding
+ himself in danger of starvation, looks about for a new master. The upper
+ classes, who had acquired a taste for foreign civilisation, no sooner
+ threw off everything German than they sought some other civilisation to
+ put in its place. And they could not long hesitate in making a choice, for
+ at that time all who thought of culture and refinement turned their eyes
+ to Paris and Versailles. All that was most brilliant and refined was to be
+ found at the Court of the French kings, under whose patronage the art and
+ literature of the Renaissance had attained their highest development. Even
+ Germany, which had resisted the ambitious designs of Louis XIV., imitated
+ the manners of his Court. Every petty German potentate strove to ape the
+ pomp and dignity of the Grand Monarque; and the courtiers, affecting to
+ look on everything German as rude and barbarous, adopted French fashions,
+ and spoke a hybrid jargon which they considered much more elegant than the
+ plain mother tongue. In a word, Gallomania had become the prevailing
+ social epidemic of the time, and it could not fail to attack and
+ metamorphose such a class as the Russian Noblesse, which possessed few
+ stubborn deep-rooted national convictions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first the French influence was manifested chiefly in external forms&mdash;that
+ is to say, in dress, manners, language, and upholstery&mdash;but
+ gradually, and very rapidly after the accession of Catherine II., the
+ friend of Voltaire and the Encyclopaedists, it sank deeper. Every noble
+ who had pretensions to being "civilised" learned to speak French fluently,
+ and gained some superficial acquaintance with French literature. The
+ tragedies of Corneille and Racine and the comedies of Moliere were played
+ regularly at the Court theatre in presence of the Empress, and awakened a
+ real or affected enthusiasm among the audience. For those who preferred
+ reading in their native language, numerous translations were published, a
+ simple list of which would fill several pages. Among them we find not only
+ Voltaire, Rousseau, Lesage, Marmontel, and other favourite French authors,
+ but also all the masterpieces of European literature, ancient and modern,
+ which at that time enjoyed a high reputation in the French literary world&mdash;Homer
+ and Demosthenes, Cicero and Virgil, Ariosto and Camoens, Milton and Locke,
+ Sterne and Fielding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is related of Byron that he never wrote a description whilst the scene
+ was actually before him; and this fact points to an important
+ psychological principle. The human mind, so long as it is compelled to
+ strain the receptive faculties, cannot engage in that "poetic" activity&mdash;to
+ use the term in its Greek sense&mdash;which is commonly called "original
+ creation." And as with individuals, so with nations. By accepting in a
+ lump a foreign culture a nation inevitably condemns itself for a time to
+ intellectual sterility. So long as it is occupied in receiving and
+ assimilating a flood of new ideas, unfamiliar conceptions, and foreign
+ modes of thought, it will produce nothing original, and the result of its
+ highest efforts will be merely successful imitation. We need not be
+ surprised therefore to find that the Russians, in becoming acquainted with
+ foreign literature, became imitators and plagiarists. In this kind of work
+ their natural pliancy of mind and powerful histrionic talent made them
+ wonderfully successful. Odes, pseudo-classical tragedies, satirical
+ comedies, epic poems, elegies, and all the other recognised forms of
+ poetical composition, appeared in great profusion, and many of the writers
+ acquired a remarkable command over their native language, which had
+ hitherto been regarded as uncouth and barbarous. But in all this mass of
+ imitative literature, which has since fallen into well-merited oblivion,
+ there are very few traces of genuine originality. To obtain the title of
+ the Russian Racine, the Russian Lafontaine, the Russian Pindar, or the
+ Russian Homer, was at that time the highest aim of Russian literary
+ ambition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Together with the fashionable literature the Russian educated classes
+ adopted something of the fashionable philosophy. They were peculiarly
+ unfitted to resist that hurricane of "enlightenment" which swept over
+ Europe during the latter half of the eighteenth century, first breaking or
+ uprooting the received philosophical systems, theological conceptions, and
+ scientific theories, and then shaking to their foundations the existing
+ political and social institutions. The Russian Noblesse had neither the
+ traditional conservative spirit, nor the firm, well-reasoned, logical
+ beliefs which in England and Germany formed a powerful barrier against the
+ spread of French influence. They had been too recently metamorphosed, and
+ were too eager to acquire a foreign civilisation, to have even the germs
+ of a conservative spirit. The rapidity and violence with which Peter's
+ reforms had been effected, together with the peculiar spirit of Greek
+ Orthodoxy and the low intellectual level of the clergy, had prevented
+ theology from associating itself with the new order of things. The upper
+ classes had become estranged from the beliefs of their forefathers without
+ acquiring other beliefs to supply the place of those which had been lost.
+ The old religious conceptions were inseparably interwoven with what was
+ recognised as antiquated and barbarous, whilst the new philosophical ideas
+ were associated with all that was modern and civilised. Besides this, the
+ sovereign, Catherine II., who enjoyed the unbounded admiration of the
+ upper classes, openly professed allegiance to the new philosophy, and
+ sought the advice and friendship of its high priests. If we bear in mind
+ these facts we shall not be surprised to find among the Russian nobles of
+ that time a considerable number of so-called "Voltaireans" and numerous
+ unquestioning believers in the infallibility of the Encyclopedie. What is
+ a little more surprising is, that the new philosophy sometimes found its
+ way into the ecclesiastical seminaries. The famous Speranski relates that
+ in the seminary of St. Petersburg one of his professors, when not in a
+ state of intoxication, was in the habit of preaching the doctrines of
+ Voltaire and Diderot!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rise of the sentimental school in Western Europe produced an important
+ change in Russian literature, by undermining the inordinate admiration for
+ the French pseudo-classical school. Florian, Richardson, Sterne, Rousseau,
+ and Bernardin de St. Pierre found first translators, and then imitators,
+ and soon the loud-sounding declamation and wordy ecstatic despair of the
+ stage heroes were drowned in the deep-drawn sighs and plaintive wailings
+ of amorous swains and peasant-maids forsaken. The mania seems to have been
+ in Russia even more severe than in the countries where it originated.
+ Full-grown, bearded men wept because they had not been born in peaceful
+ primitive times, "when all men were shepherds and brothers." Hundreds of
+ sighing youths and maidens visited the scenes described by the sentimental
+ writers, and wandered by the rivers and ponds in which despairing heroines
+ had drowned themselves. People talked, wrote, and meditated about "the
+ sympathy of hearts created for each other," "the soft communion of
+ sympathetic souls," and much more of the same kind. Sentimental journeys
+ became a favourite amusement, and formed the subject of very popular
+ books, containing maudlin absurdities likely to produce nowadays mirth
+ rather than tears. One traveller, for instance, throws himself on his
+ knees before an old oak and makes a speech to it; another weeps daily on
+ the grave of a favourite dog, and constantly longs to marry a peasant
+ girl; a third talks love to the moon, sends kisses to the stars, and
+ wishes to press the heavenly orbs to his bosom! For a time the public
+ would read nothing but absurd productions of this sort, and Karamzin, the
+ great literary authority of the time, expressly declared that the true
+ function of Art was "to disseminate agreeable impressions in the region of
+ the sentimental."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The love of French philosophy vanished as suddenly as the inordinate
+ admiration of the French pseudo-classical literature. When the great
+ Revolution broke out in Paris the fashionable philosophic literature in
+ St. Petersburg disappeared. Men who talked about political freedom and the
+ rights of man, without thinking for a moment of limiting the autocratic
+ power or of emancipating their serfs, were naturally surprised and
+ frightened on discovering what the liberal principles could effect when
+ applied to real life. Horrified by the awful scenes of the Terror, they
+ hastened to divest themselves of the principles which led to such results,
+ and sank into a kind of optimistic conservatism that harmonised well with
+ the virtuous sentimentalism in vogue. In this the Empress herself gave the
+ example. The Imperial disciple and friend of the Encyclopaedists became in
+ the last years of her reign a decided reactionnaire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the Napoleonic wars, when the patriotic feelings were excited,
+ there was a violent hostility to foreign intellectual influence; and
+ feeble intermittent attempts were made to throw off the intellectual
+ bondage. The invasion of the country in 1812 by the Grande Armee, and the
+ burning of Moscow, added abundant fuel to this patriotic fire. For some
+ time any one who ventured to express even a moderate admiration for French
+ culture incurred the risk of being stigmatised as a traitor to his country
+ and a renegade to the national faith. But this patriotic fanaticism soon
+ evaporated, and exaggerations of the ultra-national party became the
+ object of satire and parody. When the political danger was past, and
+ people resumed their ordinary occupations, those who loved foreign
+ literature returned to their old favourites&mdash;or, as the
+ ultra-patriots called it, to their "wallowing in the mire"&mdash;simply
+ because the native literature did not supply them with what they desired.
+ "We are quite ready," they said to their upbraiders, "to admire your great
+ works as soon as they appear, but in the meantime please allow us to enjoy
+ what we possess." Thus in the last years of the reign of Alexander I. the
+ patriotic opposition to West European literature gradually ceased, and a
+ new period of unrestricted intellectual importation began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intellectual merchandise now brought into the country was very
+ different from that which had been imported in the time of Catherine. The
+ French Revolution, the Napoleonic domination, the patriotic wars, the
+ restoration of the Bourbons, and the other great events of that memorable
+ epoch, had in the interval produced profound changes in the intellectual
+ as well as the political condition of Western Europe. During the
+ Napoleonic wars Russia had become closely associated with Germany; and now
+ the peculiar intellectual fermentation which was going on among the German
+ educated classes was reflected in the society of St. Petersburg. It did
+ not appear, indeed, in the printed literature, for the Press-censure had
+ been recently organised on the principles laid down by Metternich, but it
+ was none the less violent on that account. Whilst the periodicals were
+ filled with commonplace meditations on youth, spring, the love of Art, and
+ similar innocent topics, the young generation was discussing in the salons
+ all the burning questions which Metternich and his adherents were
+ endeavouring to extinguish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These discussions, if discussions they might be called, were not of a very
+ serious kind. In true dilettante style the fashionable young philosophers
+ culled from the newest books the newest thoughts and theories, and
+ retailed them in the salon or the ballroom. And they were always sure to
+ find attentive listeners. The more astounding the idea or dogma, the more
+ likely was it to be favourably received. No matter whether it came from
+ the Rationalists, the Mystics, the Freemasons, or the Methodists, it was
+ certain to find favour, provided it was novel and presented in an elegant
+ form. The eclectic minds of that curious time could derive equal
+ satisfaction from the brilliant discourses of the reactionary jesuitical
+ De Maistre, the revolutionary odes of Pushkin, and the mysticism of Frau
+ von Krudener. For the majority the vague theosophic doctrines and the
+ projects for a spiritual union of governments and peoples had perhaps the
+ greatest charm, being specially commended by the fact that they enjoyed
+ the protection and sympathy of the Emperor. Pious souls discovered in the
+ mystical lucubrations of Jung-Stilling and Baader the final solution of
+ all existing difficulties&mdash;political, social, and philosophical. Men
+ of less dreamy temperament put their faith in political economy and
+ constitutional theories, and sought a foundation for their favourite
+ schemes in the past history of the country and in the supposed fundamental
+ peculiarities of the national character. Like the young German democrats,
+ who were then talking enthusiastically about Teutons, Cheruskers, Skalds,
+ the shade of Arminius, and the heroes of the Niebelungen, these young
+ Russian savants recognised in early Russian history&mdash;when
+ reconstructed according to their own fancy&mdash;lofty political ideals,
+ and dreamed of resuscitating the ancient institutions in all their
+ pristine imaginary splendour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each age has its peculiar social and political panaceas. One generation
+ puts its trust in religion, another in philanthropy, a third in written
+ constitutions, a fourth in universal suffrage, a fifth in popular
+ education. In the Epoch of the Restoration, as it is called, the favourite
+ panacea all over the Continent was secret political association. Very soon
+ after the overthrow of Napoleon the peoples who had risen in arms to
+ obtain political independence discovered that they had merely changed
+ masters. The Princes reconstructed Europe according to their own
+ convenience, without paying much attention to patriotic aspirations, and
+ forgot their promises of liberal institutions as soon as they were again
+ firmly seated on their thrones. This was naturally for many a bitter
+ deception. The young generation, excluded from all share in political life
+ and gagged by the stringent police supervision, sought to realise its
+ political aspirations by means of secret societies, resembling more or
+ less the Masonic brotherhoods. There were the Burschenschaften in Germany;
+ the Union, and the "Aide toi et le ciel t'aidera," in France; the Order of
+ the Hammer in Spain; the Carbonari in Italy; and the Hetairai in Greece.
+ In Russia the young nobles followed the prevailing fashion. Secret
+ societies were formed, and in December, 1825, an attempt was made to raise
+ a military insurrection in St. Petersburg, for the purpose of deposing the
+ Imperial family and proclaiming a republic; but the attempt failed, and
+ the vague Utopian dreams of the romantic would-be reformers were swept
+ away by grape-shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This "December catastrophe," still vividly remembered, was for the society
+ of St. Petersburg like the giving way of the floor in a crowded ball-room.
+ But a moment before, all had been animated, careless, and happy; now
+ consternation was depicted on every face. The salons, that but yesterday
+ had been ringing with lively discussions on morals, aesthetics, politics,
+ and theology, were now silent and deserted. Many of those who had been
+ wont to lead the causeries had been removed to the cells of the fortress,
+ and those who had not been arrested trembled for themselves or their
+ friends; for nearly all had of late dabbled more or less in the theory and
+ practice of revolution. The announcement that five of the conspirators had
+ been condemned to the gallows and the others sentenced to transportation
+ did not tend to calm the consternation. Society was like a discomfited
+ child, who, amidst the delight and excitement of letting off fireworks,
+ has had its fingers severely burnt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sentimental, wavering Alexander I. had been succeeded by his stern,
+ energetic brother Nicholas, and the command went forth that there should
+ be no more fireworks, no more dilettante philosophising or political
+ aspirations. There was, however, little need for such an order. Society
+ had been, for the moment at least, effectually cured of all tendencies to
+ political dreaming. It had discovered, to its astonishment and dismay,
+ that these new ideas, which were to bring temporal salvation to humanity,
+ and to make all men happy, virtuous, refined, and poetical, led in reality
+ to exile and the scaffold! The pleasant dream was at an end, and the
+ fashionable world, giving up its former habits, took to harmless
+ occupations&mdash;card-playing, dissipation, and the reading of French
+ light literature. "The French quadrille," as a writer of the time tersely
+ expresses it, "has taken the place of Adam Smith."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the storm had passed, the life of the salons began anew, but it was
+ very different from what it had been. There was no longer any talk about
+ political economy, theology, popular education, administrative abuses,
+ social and political reforms. Everything that had any relation to politics
+ in the wider sense of the term was by tacit consent avoided. Discussions
+ there were as of old, but they were now confined to literary topics,
+ theories of art, and similar innocent subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This indifference or positive repugnance to philosophy and political
+ science, strengthened and prolonged by the repressive system of
+ administration adopted by Nicholas, was of course fatal to the many-sided
+ intellectual activity which had flourished during the preceding reign, but
+ it was by no means unfavourable to the cultivation of imaginative
+ literature. On the contrary, by excluding those practical interests which
+ tend to disturb artistic production and to engross the attention of the
+ public, it fostered what was called in the phraseology of that time "the
+ pure-hearted worship of the Muses." We need not, therefore, be surprised
+ to find that the reign of Nicholas, which is commonly and not unjustly
+ described as an epoch of social and intellectual stagnation, may be called
+ in a certain sense the Golden Age of Russian literature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Already in the preceding reign the struggle between the Classical and the
+ Romantic school&mdash;between the adherents of traditional aesthetic
+ principles and the partisans of untrammelled poetic inspiration&mdash;which
+ was being carried on in Western Europe, was reflected in Russia. A group
+ of young men belonging to the aristocratic society of St. Petersburg
+ embraced with enthusiasm the new doctrines, and declared war against
+ "classicism," under which term they understood all that was antiquated,
+ dry, and pedantic. Discarding the stately, lumbering, unwieldy periods
+ which had hitherto been in fashion, they wrote a light, elastic, vigorous
+ style, and formed a literary society for the express purpose of ridiculing
+ the most approved classical writers. The new principles found many
+ adherents, and the new style many admirers, but this only intensified the
+ hostility of the literary Conservatives. The staid, respectable leaders of
+ the old school, who had all their lives kept the fear of Boileau before
+ their eyes and considered his precepts as the infallible utterances of
+ aesthetic wisdom, thundered against the impious innovations as
+ unmistakable symptoms of literary decline and moral degeneracy&mdash;representing
+ the boisterous young iconoclasts as dissipated Don Juans and dangerous
+ freethinkers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus for some time in Russia, as in Western Europe, "a terrible war raged
+ on Parnassus." At first the Government frowned at the innovators, on
+ account of certain revolutionary odes which one of their number had
+ written; but when the Romantic Muse, having turned away from the present
+ as essentially prosaic, went back into the distant past and soared into
+ the region of sublime abstractions, the most keen-eyed Press Censors found
+ no reason to condemn her worship, and the authorities placed almost no
+ restrictions on free poetic inspiration. Romantic poetry acquired the
+ protection of the Government and the patronage of the Court, and the names
+ of Zhukofski, Pushkin, and Lermontof&mdash;the three chief representatives
+ of the Russian Romantic school&mdash;became household words in all ranks
+ of the educated classes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These three great luminaries of the literary world were of course attended
+ by a host of satellites of various magnitudes, who did all in their power
+ to refute the romantic principles by reductiones ad absurdum. Endowed for
+ the most part with considerable facility of composition, the poetasters
+ poured forth their feelings with torrential recklessness, demanding
+ freedom for their inspiration, and cursing the age that fettered them with
+ its prosaic cares, its cold reason, and its dry science. At the same time
+ the dramatists and novelists created heroes of immaculate character and
+ angelic purity, endowed with all the cardinal virtues in the superlative
+ degree; and, as a contrast to these, terrible Satanic personages with
+ savage passions, gleaming daggers, deadly poisons, and all manner of
+ aimless melodramatic villainy. These stilted productions, interspersed
+ with light satirical essays, historical sketches, literary criticism, and
+ amusing anecdotes, formed the contents of the periodical literature, and
+ completely satisfied the wants of the reading public. Almost no one at
+ that time took any interest in public affairs or foreign politics. The
+ acts of the Government which were watched most attentively were the
+ promotions in the service and the conferring of decorations. The
+ publication of a new tale by Zagoskin or Marlinski&mdash;two writers now
+ well-nigh forgotten&mdash;seemed of much greater importance than any
+ amount of legislation, and such events as the French Revolution of 1830
+ paled before the publication of a new poem by Pushkin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Transcendental philosophy, which in Germany went hand in hand with the
+ Romantic literature, found likewise a faint reflection in Russia. A number
+ of young professors and students in Moscow, who had become ardent admirers
+ of German literature, passed from the works of Schiller, Goethe, and
+ Hoffmann to the writing of Schelling and Hegel. Trained in the Romantic
+ school, these young philosophers found at first a special charm in
+ Schelling's mystical system, teeming with hazy poetical metaphors, and
+ presenting a misty grandiose picture of the universe; but gradually they
+ felt the want of some logical basis for their speculations, and Hegel
+ became their favourite. Gallantly they struggled with the uncouth
+ terminology and epigrammatic paradoxes of the great thinker, and strove to
+ force their way through the intricate mazes of his logical formulae. With
+ the ardour of neophytes they looked at every phenomenon&mdash;even the
+ most trivial incident of common life&mdash;from the philosophical point of
+ view, talked day and night about principles, ideas, subjectivity,
+ Weltauffassung, and similar abstract entities, and habitually attacked the
+ "hydra of unphilosophy" by analysing the phenomena presented and
+ relegating the ingredient elements to the recognised categories. In
+ ordinary life they were men of quiet, grave, contemplative demeanour, but
+ their faces could flush and their blood boil when they discussed the
+ all-important question, whether it is possible to pass logically from Pure
+ Being through Nonentity to the conception of Development and Definite
+ Existence!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We know how in Western Europe Romanticism and Transcendentalism, in their
+ various forms, sank into oblivion, and were replaced by a literature which
+ had a closer connection with ordinary prosaic wants and plain everyday
+ life. The educated public became weary of the Romantic writers, who were
+ always "sighing like a furnace," delighting in solitude, cold eternity,
+ and moonshine, deluging the world with their heart-gushings, and calling
+ on the heavens and the earth to stand aghast at their Promethean agonising
+ or their Wertherean despair. Healthy human nature revolted against the
+ poetical enthusiasts who had lost the faculty of seeing things in their
+ natural light, and who constantly indulged in that morbid self-analysis
+ which is fatal to genuine feeling and vigorous action. And in this healthy
+ reaction the philosophers fared no better than the poets, with whom,
+ indeed, they had much in common. Shutting their eyes to the visible world
+ around them, they had busied themselves with burrowing in the mysterious
+ depths of Absolute Being, grappling with the ego and the non-ego,
+ constructing the great world, visible and invisible, out of their own puny
+ internal self-consciousness, endeavouring to appropriate all departments
+ of human thought, and imparting to every subject they touched the dryness
+ and rigidity of an algebraical formula. Gradually men with real human
+ sympathies began to perceive that from all this philosophical turmoil
+ little real advantage was to be derived. It became only too evident that
+ the philosophers were perfectly reconciled with all the evil in the world,
+ provided it did not contradict their theories; that they were men of the
+ same type as the physician in Moliere's comedy, whose chief care was that
+ his patients should die selon les ordonnances de la medicine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Russia the reaction first appeared in the aesthetic literature. Its
+ first influential representative was Gogol (b. 1808, d. 1852), who may be
+ called, in a certain sense, the Russian Dickens. A minute comparison of
+ those two great humourists would perhaps show as many points of contrast
+ as of similarity, but there is a strong superficial resemblance between
+ them. They both possessed an inexhaustible supply of broad humour and an
+ imagination of singular vividness. Both had the power of seeing the
+ ridiculous side of common things, and the talent of producing caricatures
+ that had a wonderful semblance of reality. A little calm reflection would
+ suffice to show that the characters presented are for the most part
+ psychological impossibilities; but on first making their acquaintance we
+ are so struck with one or two life-like characteristics and various little
+ details dexterously introduced, and at the same time we are so carried
+ away by the overflowing fun of the narrative, that we have neither time
+ nor inclination to use our critical faculties. In a very short time
+ Gogol's fame spread throughout the length and breadth of the Empire, and
+ many of his characters became as familiar to his countrymen as Sam Weller
+ and Mrs. Gamp were to Englishmen. His descriptions were so graphic&mdash;so
+ like the world which everybody knew! The characters seemed to be old
+ acquaintances hit off to the life; and readers revelled in that peculiar
+ pleasure which most of us derive from seeing our friends successfully
+ mimicked. Even the Iron Tsar could not resist the fun and humour of "The
+ Inspector" (Revizor), and not only laughed heartily, but also protected
+ the author against the tyranny of the literary censors, who considered
+ that the piece was not written in a sufficiently "well-intentioned" tone.
+ In a word, the reading public laughed as it had never laughed before, and
+ this wholesome genuine merriment did much to destroy the morbid appetite
+ for Byronic heroes and Romantic affectation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Romantic Muse did not at once abdicate, but with the spread of Gogol's
+ popularity her reign was practically at an end. In vain some of the
+ conservative critics decried the new favourite as talentless, prosaic, and
+ vulgar. The public were not to be robbed of their amusement for the sake
+ of any abstract aesthetic considerations; and young authors, taking Gogol
+ for their model, chose their subjects from real life, and endeavoured to
+ delineate with minute truthfulness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This new intellectual movement was at first purely literary, and affected
+ merely the manner of writing novels, tales, and poems. The critics who had
+ previously demanded beauty of form and elegance of expression now demanded
+ accuracy of description, condemned the aspirations towards so-called high
+ art, and praised loudly those who produced the best literary photographs.
+ But authors and critics did not long remain on this purely aesthetic
+ standpoint. The authors, in describing reality, began to indicate moral
+ approval and condemnation, and the critics began to pass from the
+ criticism of the representations to the criticism of the realities
+ represented. A poem or a tale was often used as a peg on which to hang a
+ moral lecture, and the fictitious characters were soundly rated for their
+ sins of omission and commission. Much was said about the defence of the
+ oppressed, female emancipation, honour, and humanitarianism; and ridicule
+ was unsparingly launched against all forms of ignorance, apathy, and the
+ spirit of routine. The ordinary refrain was that the public ought now to
+ discard what was formerly regarded as poetical and sublime, and to occupy
+ itself with practical concerns&mdash;with the real wants of social life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The literary movement was thus becoming a movement in favour of social and
+ political reforms when it was suddenly arrested by political events in the
+ West. The February Revolution in Paris, and the political fermentation
+ which appeared during 1848-49 in almost every country of Europe, alarmed
+ the Emperor Nicholas and his counsellors. A Russian army was sent into
+ Austria to suppress the Hungarian insurrection and save the Hapsburg
+ dynasty, and the most stringent measures were taken to prevent disorders
+ at home. One of the first precautions for the preservation of domestic
+ tranquillity was to muzzle the Press more firmly than before, and to
+ silence the aspirations towards reform and progress; thenceforth nothing
+ could be printed which was not in strict accordance with the
+ ultra-patriotic theory of Russian history, as expressed by a leading
+ official personage: "The past has been admirable, the present is more than
+ magnificent, and the future will surpass all that the human imagination
+ can conceive!" The alarm caused by the revolutionary disorders spread to
+ the non-official world, and gave rise to much patriotic
+ self-congratulation. "The nations of the West," it was said, "envy us, and
+ if they knew us better&mdash;if they could see how happy and prosperous we
+ are&mdash;they would envy us still more. We ought not, however, to
+ withdraw from Europe our solicitude; its hostility should not deprive us
+ of our high mission of saving order and restoring rest to the nations; we
+ ought to teach them to obey authority as we do. It is for us to introduce
+ the saving principle of order into a world that has fallen a prey to
+ anarchy. Russia ought not to abandon that mission which has been entrusted
+ to her by the heavenly and by the earthly Tsar."*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * These words were written by Tchaadaef, who, a few years
+ before, had vigorously attacked the Slavophils for enouncing
+ similar views.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Men who saw in the significant political eruption of 1848 nothing but an
+ outburst of meaningless, aimless anarchy, and who believed that their
+ country was destined to restore order throughout the civilised world, had
+ of course little time or inclination to think of putting their own house
+ in order. No one now spoke of the necessity of social reorganisation: the
+ recently awakened aspirations and expectations seemed to be completely
+ forgotten. The critics returned to their old theory that art and
+ literature should be cultivated for their own sake and not used as a
+ vehicle for the propagation of ideas foreign to their nature. It seemed,
+ in short, as if all the prolific ideas which had for a time occupied the
+ public attention had been merely "writ in water," and had now disappeared
+ without leaving a trace behind them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In reality the new movement was destined to reappear very soon with
+ tenfold force; but the account of its reappearance and development belongs
+ to a future chapter. Meanwhile I may formulate the general conclusion to
+ be drawn from the foregoing pages. Ever since the time of Peter the Great
+ there has been such a close connection between Russia and Western Europe
+ that every intellectual movement which has appeared in France and Germany
+ has been reflected&mdash;albeit in an exaggerated, distorted form&mdash;in
+ the educated society of St. Petersburg and Moscow. Thus the window which
+ Peter opened in order to enable his subjects to look into Europe has well
+ served its purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE CRIMEAN WAR AND ITS CONSEQUENCES
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The Emperor Nicholas and his System&mdash;The Men with Aspirations and the
+ Apathetically Contented&mdash;National Humiliation&mdash;Popular
+ Discontent and the Manuscript Literature&mdash;Death of Nicholas&mdash;Alexander
+ II.&mdash;New Spirit&mdash;Reform Enthusiasm&mdash;Change in the
+ Periodical Literature&mdash;The Kolokol&mdash;The Conservatives&mdash;The
+ Tchinovniks&mdash;First Specific Proposals&mdash;Joint-Stock Companies&mdash;The
+ Serf Question Comes to the Front.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russians frankly admit that they were beaten in the Crimean War, but
+ they regard the heroic defence of Sebastopol as one of the most glorious
+ events in the military annals of their country. Nor do they altogether
+ regret the result of the struggle. Often in a half-jocular, half-serious
+ tone they say that they had reason to be grateful to the Allies. And there
+ is much truth in this paradoxical statement. The Crimean War inaugurated a
+ new epoch in the national history. It gave the death-blow to the
+ repressive system of the Emperor Nicholas, and produced an intellectual
+ movement and a moral revival which led to gigantic results.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The affair of December," 1825&mdash;I mean the abortive attempt at a
+ military insurrection in St. Petersburg, to which I have alluded in the
+ foregoing chapter&mdash;gave the key-note to Nicholas's reign. The armed
+ attempt to overthrow the Imperial power, ending in the execution or exile
+ of many young members of the first families, struck terror into the
+ Noblesse, and prepared the way for a period of repressive police
+ administration. Nicholas had none of the moral limpness and vacillating
+ character of his predecessor. His was one of those simple, vigorous,
+ tenacious, straightforward natures&mdash;more frequently to be met with
+ among the Teutonic than among the Slav races&mdash;whose conceptions are
+ all founded on a few deep-rooted, semi-instinctive convictions, and who
+ are utterly incapable of accommodating themselves with histrionic
+ cleverness to the changes of external circumstances. From his early youth
+ he had shown a strong liking for military discipline and a decided
+ repugnance to the humanitarianism and liberal principles then in fashion.
+ With "the rights of man," "the spirit of the age," and similar
+ philosophical abstractions his strong, domineering nature had no sympathy;
+ and for the vague, loud-sounding phrases of philosophic liberalism he had
+ a most profound contempt. "Attend to your military duties," he was wont to
+ say to his officers before his accession; "don't trouble your heads with
+ philosophy. I cannot bear philosophers!" The tragic event which formed the
+ prelude to his reign naturally confirmed and fortified his previous
+ convictions. The representatives of liberalism, who could talk so
+ eloquently about duty in the abstract, had, whilst wearing the uniform of
+ the Imperial Guard, openly disobeyed the repeated orders of their superior
+ officers and attempted to shake the allegiance of the troops for the
+ purpose of overthrowing the Imperial power! A man who was at once soldier
+ and autocrat, by nature as well as by position, could of course admit no
+ extenuating circumstances. The incident stereotyped his character for
+ life, and made him the sworn enemy of liberalism and the fanatical
+ defender of autocracy, not only in his own country, but throughout Europe.
+ In European politics he saw two forces struggling for mastery&mdash;monarchy
+ and democracy, which were in his opinion identical with order and anarchy;
+ and he was always ready to assist his brother sovereigns in putting down
+ democratic movements. In his own Empire he endeavoured by every means in
+ his power to prevent the introduction of the dangerous ideas. For this
+ purpose a stringent intellectual quarantine was established on the western
+ frontier. All foreign books and newspapers, except those of the most
+ harmless kind, were rigorously excluded. Native writers were placed under
+ strict supervision, and peremptorily silenced as soon as they departed
+ from what was considered a "well-intentioned" tone. The number of
+ university students was diminished, the chairs for political science were
+ suppressed, and the military schools multiplied. Russians were prevented
+ from travelling abroad, and foreigners who visited the country were
+ closely watched by the police. By these and similar measures it was hoped
+ that Russia would be preserved from the dangers of revolutionary
+ agitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nicholas has been called the Don Quixote of Autocracy, and the comparison
+ which the term implies is true in many points. By character and aims he
+ belonged to a time that had passed away; but failure and mishap could not
+ shake his faith in his ideal, and made no change in his honest, stubborn
+ nature, which was as loyal and chivalresque as that of the ill-fated
+ Knight of La Mancha. In spite of all evidence to the contrary, he believed
+ in the practical omnipotence of autocracy. He imagined that as his
+ authority was theoretically unlimited, so his power could work miracles.
+ By nature and training a soldier, he considered government a slightly
+ modified form of military discipline, and looked on the nation as an army
+ which might be made to perform any intellectual or economic evolutions
+ that he might see fit to command. All social ills seemed to him the
+ consequence of disobedience to his orders, and he knew only one remedy&mdash;more
+ discipline. Any expression of doubt as to the wisdom of his policy, or any
+ criticism of existing regulations, he treated as an act of insubordination
+ which a wise sovereign ought not to tolerate. If he never said, "L'Etat&mdash;c'est
+ moi!" it was because he considered the fact so self-evident that it did
+ not need to be stated. Hence any attack on the administration, even in the
+ person of the most insignificant official, was an attack on himself and on
+ the monarchical principle which he represented. The people must believe&mdash;and
+ faith, as we know, comes not by sight&mdash;that they lived under the best
+ possible government. To doubt this was political heresy. An incautious
+ word or a foolish joke against the Government was considered a serious
+ crime, and might be punished by a long exile in some distant and
+ inhospitable part of the Empire. Progress should by all means be made, but
+ it must be made by word of command, and in the way ordered. Private
+ initiative in any form was a thing on no account to be tolerated. Nicholas
+ never suspected that a ruler, however well-intentioned, energetic, and
+ legally autocratic he may be, can do but little without the co-operation
+ of his people. Experience constantly showed him the fruitlessness of his
+ efforts, but he paid no attention to its teachings. He had formed once for
+ all his theory of government, and for thirty years he acted according to
+ it with all the blindness and obstinacy of a reckless, fanatical
+ doctrinaire. Even at the close of his reign, when the terrible logic of
+ facts had proved his system to be a mistake&mdash;when his armies had been
+ defeated, his best fleet destroyed, his ports blockaded, and his treasury
+ well-nigh emptied&mdash;he could not recant. "My successor," he is
+ reported to have said on his deathbed, "may do as he pleases, but I cannot
+ change."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Nicholas lived in the old patriarchal times, when kings were the
+ uncontrolled "shepherds of the people," he would perhaps have been an
+ admirable ruler; but in the nineteenth century he was a flagrant
+ anachronism. His system of administration completely broke down. In vain
+ he multiplied formalities and inspectors, and punished severely the few
+ delinquents who happened by some accident to be brought to justice; the
+ officials continued to pilfer, extort, and misgovern in every possible
+ way. Though the country was reduced to what would be called in Europe "a
+ state of siege," the inhabitants might still have said&mdash;as they are
+ reported to have declared a thousand years before&mdash;"Our land is great
+ and fertile, but there is no order in it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a nation accustomed to political life and to a certain amount of
+ self-government, any approach to the system of Nicholas would, of course,
+ have produced wide-spread dissatisfaction and violent hatred against the
+ ruling power. But in Russia at that time no such feelings were awakened.
+ The educated classes&mdash;and a fortiori the uneducated&mdash;were
+ profoundly indifferent not only to political questions, but also to
+ ordinary public affairs, whether local or Imperial, and were quite content
+ to leave them in the hands of those who were paid for attending to them.
+ In common with the uneducated peasantry, the nobles had a boundless
+ respect&mdash;one might almost say a superstitious reverence&mdash;not
+ only for the person, but also for the will of the Tsar, and were ready to
+ show unquestioning obedience to his commands, so long as these did not
+ interfere with their accustomed mode of life. The Tsar desired them not to
+ trouble their heads with political questions, and to leave all public
+ matters to the care of the Administration; and in this respect the
+ Imperial will coincided so well with their personal inclinations that they
+ had no difficulty in complying with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Tsar ordered those of them who held office to refrain from
+ extortion and peculation, his orders were not so punctiliously obeyed, but
+ in this disobedience there was no open opposition&mdash;no assertion of a
+ right to pilfer and extort. As the disobedience proceeded, not from a
+ feeling of insubordination, but merely from the weakness that official
+ flesh is heir to, it was not regarded as very heinous. In the aristocratic
+ circles of St. Petersburg and Moscow there was the same indifference to
+ political questions and public affairs. All strove to have the reputation
+ of being "well-intentioned," which was the first requisite for those who
+ desired Court favour or advancement in the public service; and those whose
+ attention was not entirely occupied with official duties, card-playing,
+ and the ordinary routine of everyday life, cultivated belles-lettres or
+ the fine arts. In short, the educated classes in Russia at that time
+ showed a complete indifference to political and social questions, an
+ apathetic acquiescence in the system of administration adopted by the
+ Government, and an unreasoning contentment with the existing state of
+ things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the year 1845, when the reaction against Romanticism was awakening
+ in the reading public an interest in the affairs of real life,* began to
+ appear what may be called "the men with aspirations," a little band of
+ generous enthusiasts, strongly resembling the youth in Longfellow's poem
+ who carries a banner with the device "Excelsior," and strives ever to
+ climb higher, without having any clear notion of where he was going or of
+ what he is to do when he reaches the summit. At first they had little more
+ than a sentimental enthusiasm for the true, the beautiful, and the good,
+ and a certain Platonic love for free institutions, liberty, enlightenment,
+ progress, and everything that was generally comprehended at that period
+ under the term "liberal." Gradually, under the influence of current French
+ literature, their ideas became a little clearer, and they began to look on
+ reality around them with a critical eye. They could perceive, without much
+ effort, the unrelenting tyranny of the Administration, the notorious
+ venality of the tribunals, the reckless squandering of the public money,
+ the miserable condition of the serfs, the systematic strangulation of all
+ independent opinion or private initiative, and, above all, the profound
+ apathy of the upper classes, who seemed quite content with things as they
+ were.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Vide supra, p. 377 et seq.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ With such ugly facts staring them in the face, and with the habit of
+ looking at things from the moral point of view, these men could understand
+ how hollow and false were the soothing or triumphant phrases of official
+ optimism. They did not, indeed, dare to express their indignation
+ publicly, for the authorities would allow no public expression of
+ dissatisfaction with the existing state of things, but they disseminated
+ their ideas among their friends and acquaintances by means of conversation
+ and manuscript literature, and some of them, as university professors and
+ writers in the periodical Press, contrived to awaken in a certain section
+ of the young generation an ardent enthusiasm for enlightenment and
+ progress, and a vague hope that a brighter day was about to dawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not a few sympathised with these new conceptions and aspirations, but the
+ great majority of the nobles regarded them&mdash;especially after the
+ French Revolution of 1848&mdash;as revolutionary and dangerous. Thus the
+ educated classes became divided into two sections, which have sometimes
+ been called the Liberals and the Conservatives, but which might be more
+ properly designated the men with aspirations and the apathetically
+ contented. These latter doubtless felt occasionally the irksomeness of the
+ existing system, but they had always one consolation&mdash;if they were
+ oppressed at home they were feared abroad. The Tsar was at least a
+ thorough soldier, possessing an enormous and well-equipped army by which
+ he might at any moment impose his will on Europe. Ever since the glorious
+ days of 1812, when Napoleon was forced to make an ignominious retreat from
+ the ruins of Moscow, the belief that the Russian soldiers were superior to
+ all others, and that the Russian army was invincible, had become an
+ article of the popular creed; and the respect which the voice of Nicholas
+ commanded in Western Europe seemed to prove that the fact was admitted by
+ foreign nations. In these and similar considerations the apathetically
+ contented found a justification for their lethargy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it became evident that Russia was about to engage in a trial of
+ strength with the Western Powers, this optimism became general. "The heavy
+ burdens," it was said, "which the people have had to bear were necessary
+ to make Russia the first military Power in Europe, and now the nation will
+ reap the fruits of its long-suffering and patient resignation. The West
+ will learn that her boasted liberty and liberal institutions are of little
+ service in the hour of danger, and the Russians who admire such
+ institutions will be constrained to admit that a strong, all-directing
+ autocracy is the only means of preserving national greatness." As the
+ patriotic fervour and military enthusiasm increased, nothing was heard but
+ praises of Nicholas and his system. The war was regarded by many as a kind
+ of crusade&mdash;even the Emperor spoke about the defence of "the native
+ soil and the holy faith"&mdash;and the most exaggerated expectations were
+ entertained of its results. The old Eastern Question was at last to be
+ solved in accordance with Russian aspirations, and Nicholas was about to
+ realise Catherine II.'s grand scheme of driving the Turks out of Europe.
+ The date at which the troops would arrive at Constantinople was actively
+ discussed, and a Slavophil poet called on the Emperor to lie down in
+ Constantinople, and rise up as Tsar of a Panslavonic Empire. Some
+ enthusiasts even expected the speedy liberation of Jerusalem from the
+ power of the Infidel. To the enemy, who might possibly hinder the
+ accomplishment of these schemes, very little attention was paid. "We have
+ only to throw our hats at them!" (Shapkami zakidaem) became a favourite
+ expression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were, however, a few men in whom the prospect of the coming struggle
+ awoke very different thoughts and feelings. They could not share the
+ sanguine expectations of those who were confident of success. "What
+ preparations have we made," they asked, "for the struggle with
+ civilisation, which now sends its forces against us? With all our vast
+ territory and countless population we are incapable of coping with it.
+ When we talk of the glorious campaign against Napoleon, we forget that
+ since that time Europe has been steadily advancing on the road of progress
+ while we have been standing still. We march not to victory, but to defeat,
+ and the only grain of consolation which we have is that Russia will learn
+ by experience a lesson that will be of use to her in the future."*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * These are the words of Granovski.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ These prophets of evil found, of course, few disciples, and were generally
+ regarded as unworthy sons of the Fatherland&mdash;almost as traitors to
+ their country. But their predictions were confirmed by events. The Allies
+ were victorious in the Crimea, and even the despised Turks made a
+ successful stand on the line of the Danube. In spite of the efforts of the
+ Government to suppress all unpleasant intelligence, it soon became known
+ that the military organisation was little, if at all, better than the
+ civil administration&mdash;that the individual bravery of soldiers and
+ officers was neutralised by the incapacity of the generals, the venality
+ of the officials, and the shameless peculation of the commissariat
+ department. The Emperor, it was said, had drilled out of the officers all
+ energy, individuality, and moral force. Almost the only men who showed
+ judgment, decision, and energy were the officers of the Black Sea fleet,
+ which had been less subjected to the prevailing system. As the struggle
+ went on, it became evident how weak the country really was&mdash;how
+ deficient in the resources necessary to sustain a prolonged conflict.
+ "Another year of war," writes an eye-witness in 1855, "and the whole of
+ Southern Russia will be ruined." To meet the extraordinary demands on the
+ Treasury, recourse was had to an enormous issue of paper money; but the
+ rapid depreciation of the currency showed that this resource would soon be
+ exhausted. Militia regiments were everywhere raised throughout the
+ country, and many proprietors spent large sums in equipping volunteer
+ corps; but very soon this enthusiasm cooled when it was found that the
+ patriotic efforts enriched the jobbers without inflicting any serious
+ injury on the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the sting of the great national humiliation, the upper classes awoke
+ from their optimistic resignation. They had borne patiently the oppression
+ of a semi-military administration, and for this! The system of Nicholas
+ had been put to a crucial test, and found wanting. The policy which had
+ sacrificed all to increase the military power of the Empire was seen to be
+ a fatal error, and the worthlessness of the drill-sergeant regime was
+ proved by bitter experience. Those administrative fetters which had for
+ more than a quarter of a century cramped every spontaneous movement had
+ failed to fulfil even the narrow purpose for which they had been forged.
+ They had, indeed, secured a certain external tranquillity during those
+ troublous times when Europe was convulsed by revolutionary agitation; but
+ this tranquillity was not that of healthy normal action, but of death&mdash;and
+ underneath the surface lay secret and rapidly spreading corruption. The
+ army still possessed that dashing gallantry which it had displayed in the
+ campaigns of Suvorof, that dogged, stoical bravery which had checked the
+ advance of Napoleon on the field of Borodino, and that wondrous power of
+ endurance which had often redeemed the negligence of generals and the
+ defects of the commissariat; but the result was now not victory, but
+ defeat. How could this be explained except by the radical defects of that
+ system which had been long practised with such inflexible perseverance?
+ The Government had imagined that it could do everything by its own wisdom
+ and energy, and in reality it had done nothing, or worse than nothing. The
+ higher officers had learned only too well to be mere automata; the
+ ameliorations in the military organisation, on which Nicholas had always
+ bestowed special attention, were found to exist for the most part only in
+ the official reports; the shameful exploits of the commissariat department
+ were such as to excite the indignation of those who had long lived in an
+ atmosphere of official jobbery and peculation; and the finances, which
+ people had generally supposed to be in a highly satisfactory condition,
+ had become seriously crippled by the first great national effort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This deep and wide-spread dissatisfaction was not allowed to appear in the
+ Press, but it found very free expression in the manuscript literature and
+ in conversation. In almost every house&mdash;I mean, of course, among the
+ educated classes&mdash;words were spoken which a few months before would
+ have seemed treasonable, if not blasphemous. Philippics and satires in
+ prose and verse were written by the dozen, and circulated in hundreds of
+ copies. A pasquil on the Commander in Chief, or a tirade against the
+ Government, was sure to be eagerly read and warmly approved of. As a
+ specimen of this kind of literature, and an illustration of the public
+ opinion of the time, I may translate here one of those metrical tirades.
+ Though it was never printed, it obtained a wide circulation:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'God has placed me over Russia,' said the Tsar to us, 'and you must bow
+ down before me, for my throne is His altar. Trouble not yourselves with
+ public affairs, for I think for you and watch over you every hour. My
+ watchful eye detects internal evils and the machinations of foreign
+ enemies; and I have no need of counsel, for God inspires me with wisdom.
+ Be proud, therefore, of being my slaves, O Russians, and regard my will as
+ your law.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We listened to these words with deep reverence, and gave a tacit consent;
+ and what was the result? Under mountains of official papers real interests
+ were forgotten. The letter of the law was observed, but negligence and
+ crime were allowed to go unpunished. While grovelling in the dust before
+ ministers and directors of departments in the hope of receiving tchins and
+ decorations, the officials stole unblushingly; and theft became so common
+ that he who stole the most was the most respected. The merits of officers
+ were decided at reviews; and he who obtained the rank of General was
+ supposed capable of becoming at once an able governor, an excellent
+ engineer, or a most wise senator. Those who were appointed governors were
+ for the most part genuine satraps, the scourges of the provinces entrusted
+ to their care. The other offices were filled up with as little attention
+ to the merits of the candidates. A stable-boy became Press censor! an
+ Imperial fool became admiral! Kleinmichel became a count! In a word, the
+ country was handed over to the tender mercies of a band of robbers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what did we Russians do all this time?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We Russians slept! With groans the peasant paid his yearly dues; with
+ groans the proprietor mortgaged the second half of his estate; groaning,
+ we all paid our heavy tribute to the officials. Occasionally, with a grave
+ shaking of the head, we remarked in a whisper that it was a shame and a
+ disgrace&mdash;that there was no justice in the courts&mdash;that millions
+ were squandered on Imperial tours, kiosks, and pavilions&mdash;that
+ everything was wrong; and then, with an easy conscience, we sat down to
+ our rubber, praised the acting of Rachel, criticised the singing of
+ Frezzolini, bowed low to venal magnates, and squabbled with each other for
+ advancement in the very service which we so severely condemned. If we did
+ not obtain the place we wished we retired to our ancestral estates, where
+ we talked of the crops, fattened in indolence and gluttony, and lived a
+ genuine animal life. If any one, amidst the general lethargy, suddenly
+ called upon us to rise and fight for the truth and for Russia, how
+ ridiculous did he appear! How cleverly the Pharisaical official ridiculed
+ him, and how quickly the friends of yesterday showed him the cold
+ shoulder! Under the anathema of public opinion, in some distant Siberian
+ mine he recognised what a heinous sin it was to disturb the heavy sleep of
+ apathetic slaves. Soon he was forgotten, or remembered as an unfortunate
+ madman; and the few who said, 'Perhaps after all he was right,' hastened
+ to add, 'but that is none of our business.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But amidst all this we had at least one consolation, one thing to be
+ proud of&mdash;the might of Russia in the assembly of kings. 'What need we
+ care,' we said, 'for the reproaches of foreign nations? We are stronger
+ than those who reproach us.' And when at great reviews the stately
+ regiments marched past with waving standards, glittering helmets, and
+ sparkling bayonets, when we heard the loud hurrah with which the troops
+ greeted the Emperor, then our hearts swelled with patriotic pride, and we
+ were ready to repeat the words of the poet&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Strong is our native country, and great the Russian Tsar."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then British statesmen, in company with the crowned conspirator of
+ France, and with treacherous Austria, raised Western Europe against us,
+ but we laughed scornfully at the coming storm. 'Let the nations rave,' we
+ said; 'we have no cause to be afraid. The Tsar doubtless foresaw all, and
+ has long since made the necessary preparations.' Boldly we went forth to
+ fight, and confidently awaited the moment of the struggle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And lo! after all our boasting we were taken by surprise, and caught
+ unawares, as by a robber in the dark. The sleep of innate stupidity
+ blinded our Ambassadors, and our Foreign Minister sold us to our enemies.*
+ Where were our millions of soldiers? Where was the well-considered plan of
+ defence? One courier brought the order to advance; another brought the
+ order to retreat; and the army wandered about without definite aim or
+ purpose. With loss and shame we retreated from the forts of Silistria, and
+ the pride of Russia was humbled before the Hapsburg eagle. The soldiers
+ fought well, but the parade-admiral (Menshikof)&mdash;the amphibious hero
+ of lost battles&mdash;did not know the geography of his own country, and
+ sent his troops to certain destruction.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Many people at that time imagined that Count Nesselrode,
+ who was then Minister for Foreign Affairs, was a traitor to
+ his adopted country.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Awake, O Russia! Devoured by foreign enemies, crushed by slavery,
+ shamefully oppressed by stupid authorities and spies, awaken from your
+ long sleep of ignorance and apathy! You have been long enough held in
+ bondage by the successors of the Tartar Khan. Stand forward calmly before
+ the throne of the despot, and demand from him an account of the national
+ disaster. Say to him boldly that his throne is not the altar of God, and
+ that God did not condemn us to be slaves. Russia entrusted to you, O Tsar,
+ the supreme power, and you were as a God upon earth. And what have you
+ done? Blinded by ignorance and passion, you have lusted after power and
+ have forgotten Russia. You have spent your life in reviewing troops, in
+ modifying uniforms, and in appending your signature to the legislative
+ projects of ignorant charlatans. You created the despicable race of Press
+ censors, in order to sleep in peace&mdash;in order not to know the wants
+ and not to hear the groans of the people&mdash;in order not to listen to
+ Truth. You buried Truth, rolled a great stone to the door of the
+ sepulchre, placed a strong guard over it, and said in the pride of your
+ heart: For her there is no resurrection! But the third day has dawned, and
+ Truth has arisen from the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Stand forward, O Tsar, before the judgment-seat of history and of God!
+ You have mercilessly trampled Truth under foot, you have denied Freedom,
+ you have been the slave of your own passions. By your pride and obstinacy
+ you have exhausted Russia and raised the world in arms against us. Bow
+ down before your brethren and humble yourself in the dust! Crave pardon
+ and ask advice! Throw yourself into the arms of the people! There is now
+ no other salvation!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The innumerable tirades of which the above is a fair specimen were not
+ very remarkable for literary merit or political wisdom. For the most part
+ they were simply bits of bombastic rhetoric couched in doggerel rhyme, and
+ they have consequently been long since consigned to well-merited oblivion&mdash;so
+ completely that it is now difficult to obtain copies of them.* They have,
+ however, an historical interest, because they express in a more or less
+ exaggerated form the public opinion and prevalent ideas of the educated
+ classes at that moment. In order to comprehend their real significance, we
+ must remember that the writers and readers were not a band of
+ conspirators, but ordinary, respectable, well-intentioned people, who
+ never for a moment dreamed of embarking in revolutionary designs. It was
+ the same society that had been a few months before so indifferent to all
+ political questions, and even now there was no clear conception as to how
+ the loud-sounding phrases could be translated into action. We can imagine
+ the comical discomfiture of those who read and listened to these appeals,
+ if the "despot" had obeyed their summons, and suddenly appeared before
+ them.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * I am indebted for the copies which I possess to friends
+ who copied and collected these pamphlets at the time.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Was the movement, then, merely an outburst of childish petulance?
+ Certainly not. The public were really and seriously convinced that things
+ were all wrong, and they were seriously and enthusiastically desirous that
+ a new and better order of things should be introduced. It must be said to
+ their honour that they did not content themselves with accusing and
+ lampooning the individuals who were supposed to be the chief culprits. On
+ the contrary, they looked reality boldly in the face, made a public
+ confession of their past sins, sought conscientiously the causes which had
+ produced the recent disasters, and endeavoured to find means by which such
+ calamities might be prevented in the future. The public feeling and
+ aspirations were not strong enough to conquer the traditional respect for
+ the Imperial will and create an open opposition to the Autocratic Power,
+ but they were strong enough to do great things by aiding the Government,
+ if the Emperor voluntarily undertook a series of radical reforms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What Nicholas would have done, had he lived, in face of this national
+ awakening, it is difficult to say. He declared, indeed, that he could not
+ change, and we can readily believe that his proud spirit would have
+ scorned to make concessions to the principles which he had always
+ condemned; but he gave decided indications in the last days of his life
+ that his old faith in his system was somewhat shaken, and he did not
+ exhort his son to persevere in the path along which he himself had forced
+ his way with such obstinate consistency. It is useless, however, to
+ speculate on possibilities. Whilst the Government had still to concentrate
+ all its energies on the defence of the country, the Iron Tsar died, and
+ was succeeded by his son, a man of a very different type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of a kind-hearted, humane disposition, sincerely desirous of maintaining
+ the national honour, but singularly free from military ambition and imbued
+ with no fanatical belief in the drill-sergeant system of government,
+ Alexander II. was by no means insensible to the spirit of the time. He
+ had, however, none of the sentimental enthusiasm for liberal institutions
+ which had characterised his uncle, Alexander I. On the contrary, he had
+ inherited from his father a strong dislike to sentimentalism and rhetoric
+ of all kinds. This dislike, joined to a goodly portion of sober
+ common-sense, a limited confidence in his own judgment, and a
+ consciousness of enormous responsibility, prevented him from being carried
+ away by the prevailing excitement. With all that was generous and humane
+ in the movement he thoroughly sympathised, and he allowed the popular
+ ideas and aspirations to find free utterance; but he did not at once
+ commit himself to any definite policy, and carefully refrained from all
+ exaggerated expressions of reforming zeal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon, however, as peace had been concluded, there were unmistakable
+ symptoms that the rigorously repressive system of Nicholas was about to be
+ abandoned. In the manifesto announcing the termination of hostilities the
+ Emperor expressed his conviction that by the combined efforts of the
+ Government and the people, the public administration would be improved,
+ and that justice and mercy would reign in the courts of law. Apparently as
+ a preparation for this great work, to be undertaken by the Tsar and his
+ people in common, the ministers began to take the public into their
+ confidence, and submitted to public criticism many official data which had
+ hitherto been regarded as State secrets. The Minister of the Interior, for
+ instance, in his annual report, spoke almost in the tone of a penitent,
+ and confessed openly that the morality of the officials under his orders
+ left much to be desired. He declared that the Emperor now showed a
+ paternal confidence in his people, and as a proof of this he mentioned the
+ significant fact that 9,000 persons had been liberated from police
+ supervision. The other branches of the Administration underwent a similar
+ transformation. The haughty, dictatorial tone which had hitherto been used
+ by superiors to their subordinates, and by all ranks of officials to the
+ public, was replaced by one of considerate politeness. About the same time
+ those of the Decembrists who were still alive were pardoned. The
+ restrictions regarding the number of students in each university were
+ abolished, the difficulty of obtaining foreign passports was removed, and
+ the Press censors became singularly indulgent. Though no decided change
+ had been made in the laws, it was universally felt that the spirit of
+ Nicholas was no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The public, anxiously seeking after a sign, readily took these symptoms of
+ change as a complete confirmation of their ardent hopes, and leaped at
+ once to the conclusion that a vast, all-embracing system of radical reform
+ was about to be undertaken&mdash;not secretly by the Administration, as
+ had been the custom in the preceding reign when any little changes had to
+ be made, but publicly, by the Government and the people in common. "The
+ heart trembles with joy," said one of the leading organs of the Press, "in
+ expectation of the great social reforms that are about to be effected&mdash;reforms
+ that are thoroughly in accordance with the spirit, the wishes, and the
+ expectations of the public." "The old harmony and community of feeling,"
+ said another, "which has always existed between the government and the
+ people, save during short exceptional periods, has been fully
+ re-established. The absence of all sentiment of caste, and the feeling of
+ common origin and brotherhood which binds all classes of the Russian
+ people into a homogeneous whole, will enable Russia to accomplish
+ peacefully and without effort not only those great reforms which cost
+ Europe centuries of struggle and bloodshed, but also many which the
+ nations of the West are still unable to accomplish, in consequence of
+ feudal traditions and caste prejudices." The past was depicted in the
+ blackest colours, and the nation was called upon to begin a new and
+ glorious epoch of its history. "We have to struggle," it was said, "in the
+ name of the highest truth against egotism and the puny interests of the
+ moment; and we ought to prepare our children from their infancy to take
+ part in that struggle which awaits every honest man. We have to thank the
+ war for opening our eyes to the dark sides of our political and social
+ organisation, and it is now our duty to profit by the lesson. But it must
+ not be supposed that the Government can, single-handed, remedy the
+ defects. The destinies of Russia are, as it were, a stranded vessel which
+ the captain and crew cannot move, and which nothing, indeed, but the
+ rising tide of the national life can raise and float."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hearts beat quicker at the sound of these calls to action. Many heard this
+ new teaching, if we may believe a contemporary authority, "with tears in
+ their eyes"; then, "raising boldly their heads, they made a solemn vow
+ that they would act honourably, perseveringly, fearlessly." Some of those
+ who had formerly yielded to the force of circumstances now confessed their
+ misdemeanours with bitterness of heart. "Tears of repentance," said a
+ popular poet, "give relief, and call us to new exploits." Russia was
+ compared to a strong giant who awakes from sleep, stretches his brawny
+ limbs, collects his thoughts, and prepares to atone for his long
+ inactivity by feats of untold prowess. All believed, or at least assumed,
+ that the recognition of defects would necessarily entail their removal.
+ When an actor in one of the St. Petersburg theatres shouted from the
+ stage, "Let us proclaim throughout all Russia that the time has come for
+ tearing up evil by the roots!" the audience gave way to the most frantic
+ enthusiasm. "Altogether a joyful time," says one who took part in the
+ excitement, "as when, after the long winter, the genial breath of spring
+ glides over the cold, petrified earth, and nature awakens from her
+ deathlike sleep. Speech, long restrained by police and censorial
+ regulations, now flows smoothly, majestically, like a mighty river that
+ has just been freed from ice."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under these influences a multitude of newspapers and periodicals were
+ founded, and the current literature entirely changed its character. The
+ purely literary and historical questions which had hitherto engaged the
+ attention of the reading public were thrown aside and forgotten, unless
+ they could be made to illustrate some principle of political or social
+ science. Criticisms on style and diction, explanations of aesthetic
+ principles, metaphysical discussions&mdash;all this seemed miserable
+ trifling to men who wished to devote themselves to gigantic practical
+ interests. "Science," it was said, "has now descended from the heights of
+ philosophic abstraction into the arena of real life." The periodicals were
+ accordingly filled with articles on railways, banks, free-trade,
+ education, agriculture, communal institutions, local self-government,
+ joint-stock companies, and with crushing philippics against personal and
+ national vanity, inordinate luxury, administrative tyranny, and the
+ habitual peculation of the officials. This last-named subject received
+ special attention. During the preceding reign any attempt to criticise
+ publicly the character or acts of an official was regarded as a very
+ heinous offence; now there was a deluge of sketches, tales, comedies, and
+ monologues, describing the corruption of the Administration, and
+ explaining the ingenious devices by which the tchinovniks increased their
+ scanty salaries. The public would read nothing that had not a direct or
+ indirect bearing on the questions of the day, and whatever had such a
+ bearing was read with interest. It did not seem at all strange that a
+ drama should be written in defence of free-trade, or a poem in advocacy of
+ some peculiar mode of taxation; that an author should expound his
+ political ideas in a tale, and his antagonist reply by a comedy. A few men
+ of the old school protested feebly against this "prostitution of art," but
+ they received little attention, and the doctrine that art should be
+ cultivated for its own sake was scouted as an invention of aristocratic
+ indolence. Here is an ipsa pinxit of the literature of the time:
+ "Literature has come to look at Russia with her own eyes, and sees that
+ the idyllic romantic personages which the poets formerly loved to describe
+ have no objective existence. Having taken off her French glove, she offers
+ her hand to the rude, hard-working labourer, and observing lovingly
+ Russian village life, she feels herself in her native land. The writers of
+ the present have analysed the past, and, having separated themselves from
+ aristocratic litterateurs and aristocratic society, have demolished their
+ former idols."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By far the most influential periodical at the commencement of the movement
+ was the Kolokol, or Bell, a fortnightly journal published in London by
+ Herzen, who was at that time an important personage among the political
+ refugees. Herzen was a man of education and culture, with ultra-radical
+ opinions, and not averse to using revolutionary methods of reform when he
+ considered them necessary. His intimate relations with many of the leading
+ men in Russia enabled him to obtain secret information of the most
+ important and varied kind, and his sparkling wit, biting satire, and
+ clear, terse, brilliant style secured him a large number of readers. He
+ seemed to know everything that was done in the ministries and even in the
+ Cabinet of the Emperor,* and he exposed most mercilessly every abuse that
+ came to his knowledge. We who are accustomed to free political discussion
+ can hardly form a conception of the avidity with which his articles were
+ read, and the effect which they produced. Though strictly prohibited by
+ the Press censure, the Kolokol found its way across the frontier in
+ thousands of copies, and was eagerly perused and commented on by all ranks
+ of the educated classes. The Emperor himself received it regularly, and
+ high-priced delinquents examined it with fear and trembling. In this way
+ Herzen was for some years, though an exile, an important political
+ personage, and did much to awaken and keep up the reform enthusiasm.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * As an illustration of this, the following anecdote is
+ told: One number of the Kolokol contained a violent attack
+ on an important personage of the court, and the accused, or
+ some one of his friends, considered it advisable to have a
+ copy specially printed for the Emperor without the
+ objectionable article. The Emperor did not at first
+ discover the trick, but shortly afterwards he received from
+ London a polite note containing the article which had been
+ omitted, and informing him how he had been deceived.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But where were the Conservatives all this time? How came it that for two
+ or three years no voice was raised and no protest made even against the
+ rhetorical exaggerations of the new-born liberalism? Where were the
+ representatives of the old regime, who had been so thoroughly imbued with
+ the spirit of Nicholas? Where were those ministers who had systematically
+ extinguished the least indication of private initiative, those "satraps"
+ who had stamped out the least symptom of insubordination or discontent,
+ those Press censors who had diligently suppressed the mildest expression
+ of liberal opinion, those thousands of well-intentioned proprietors who
+ had regarded as dangerous free-thinkers and treasonable republicans all
+ who ventured to express dissatisfaction with the existing state of things?
+ A short time before, the Conservatives composed at least nine-tenths of
+ the upper classes, and now they had suddenly and mysteriously disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is scarcely necessary to say that in a country accustomed to political
+ life, such a sudden, unopposed revolution in public opinion could not
+ possibly take place. The key to the mystery lies in the fact that for
+ centuries Russia had known nothing of political life or political parties.
+ Those who were sometimes called Conservatives were in reality not at all
+ Conservatives in our sense of the term. If we say that they had a certain
+ amount of conservatism, we must add that it was of the latent, passive,
+ unreasoned kind&mdash;the fruit of indolence and apathy. Their political
+ creed had but one article: Thou shalt love the Tsar with all thy might,
+ and carefully abstain from all resistance to his will&mdash;especially
+ when it happens that the Tsar is a man of the Nicholas type. So long as
+ Nicholas lived they had passively acquiesced in his system&mdash;active
+ acquiescence had been neither demanded nor desired&mdash;but when he died,
+ the system of which he was the soul died with him. What then could they
+ seek to defend? They were told that the system which they had been taught
+ to regard as the sheet-anchor of the State was in reality the chief cause
+ of the national disasters; and to this they could make no reply, because
+ they had no better explanation of their own to offer. They were convinced
+ that the Russian soldier was the best soldier in the world, and they knew
+ that in the recent war the army had not been victorious; the system,
+ therefore, must be to blame. They were told that a series of gigantic
+ reforms was necessary in order to restore Russia to her proper place among
+ the nations; and to this they could make no answer, for they had never
+ studied such abstract questions. And one thing they did know: that those
+ who hesitated to admit the necessity of gigantic reforms were branded by
+ the Press as ignorant, narrow-minded, prejudiced, and egotistical, and
+ were held up to derision as men who did not know the most elementary
+ principles of political and economic science. Freely expressed public
+ opinion was such a new phenomenon in Russia that the Press was able for
+ some time to exercise a "Liberal" tyranny scarcely less severe than the
+ "Conservative" tyranny of the censors in the preceding reign. Men who
+ would have stood fire gallantly on the field of battle quailed before the
+ poisoned darts of Herzen in the Kolokol. Under such circumstances, even
+ the few who possessed some vague Conservative convictions refrained from
+ publicly expressing them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men who had played a more or less active part during the preceding
+ reign, and who might therefore be expected to have clearer and deeper
+ convictions, were specially incapable of offering opposition to the
+ prevailing Liberal enthusiasm. Their Conservatism was of quite as limp a
+ kind as that of the landed proprietors who were not in the public service,
+ for under Nicholas the higher a man was placed the less likely was he to
+ have political convictions of any kind outside the simple political creed
+ above referred to. Besides this, they belonged to that class which was for
+ the moment under the anathema of public opinion, and they had drawn direct
+ personal advantage from the system which was now recognised as the chief
+ cause of the national disasters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a time the name of tchinovnik became a term of reproach and derision,
+ and the position of those who bore it was comically painful. They strove
+ to prove that, though they held a post in the public service, they were
+ entirely free from the tchinovnik spirit&mdash;that there was nothing of
+ the genuine tchinovnik about them. Those who had formerly paraded their
+ tchin (official rank) on all occasions, in season and out of season,
+ became half ashamed to admit that they had the rank of General; for the
+ title no longer commanded respect, and had become associated with all that
+ was antiquated, formal, and stupid. Among the young generation it was used
+ most disrespectfully as equivalent to "pompous blockhead." Zealous
+ officials who had lately regarded the acquisition of Stars and Orders as
+ among the chief ends of man, were fain to conceal those hard-won trophies,
+ lest some cynical "Liberal" might notice them and make them the butt of
+ his satire. "Look at the depth of humiliation to which you have brought
+ the country"&mdash;such was the chorus of reproach that was ever ringing
+ in their ears&mdash;"with your red tape, your Chinese formalism, and your
+ principle of lifeless, unreasoning, mechanical obedience! You asserted
+ constantly that you were the only true patriots, and branded with the name
+ of traitor those who warned you of the insane folly of your conduct. You
+ see now what it has all come to. The men whom you helped to send to the
+ mines turn out to have been the true patriots."*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * It was a common saying at that time that nearly all the
+ best men in Russia had spent a part of their lives in
+ Siberia, and it was proposed to publish a biographical
+ dictionary of remarkable men, in which every article was to
+ end thus: "Exiled to &mdash;&mdash; in 18&mdash;." I am not aware how far
+ the project was seriously entertained, but, of course, the
+ book was never published.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And to these reproaches what could they reply? Like a child who has in his
+ frolics inadvertently set the house on fire, they could only look
+ contrite, and say they did not mean it. They had simply accepted without
+ criticism the existing order of things, and ranged themselves among those
+ who were officially recognised as "the well-intentioned." If they had
+ always avoided the Liberals, and perhaps helped to persecute them, it was
+ simply because all "well-intentioned" people said that Liberals were
+ "restless" and dangerous to the State. Those who were not convinced of
+ their errors simply kept silence, but the great majority passed over to
+ the ranks of the Progressists, and many endeavoured to redeem their past
+ by showing extreme zeal for the Liberal cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In explanation of this extraordinary outburst of reform enthusiasm, we
+ must further remember that the Russian educated classes, in spite of the
+ severe northern climate which is supposed to make the blood circulate
+ slowly, are extremely impulsive. They are fettered by no venerable
+ historical prejudices, and are wonderfully sensitive to the seductive
+ influence of grandiose projects, especially when these excite the
+ patriotic feelings. Then there was the simple force of reaction&mdash;the
+ rebound which naturally followed the terrific compression of the preceding
+ reign. Without disrespect, the Russians of that time may be compared to
+ schoolboys who have just escaped from the rigorous discipline of a severe
+ schoolmaster. In the first moments of freedom it was supposed that there
+ would be no more discipline or compulsion. The utmost respect was to be
+ shown to "human dignity," and every Russian was to act spontaneously and
+ zealously at the great work of national regeneration. All thirsted for
+ reforming activity. The men in authority were inundated with projects of
+ reform&mdash;some of them anonymous, and others from obscure individuals;
+ some of them practical, and very many wildly fantastic. Even the
+ grammarians showed their sympathy with the spirit of the time by proposing
+ to expel summarily all redundant letters from the Russian alphabet!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact that very few people had clear, precise ideas as to what was to
+ be done did not prevent, but rather tended to increase, the reform
+ enthusiasm. All had at least one common feeling&mdash;dislike to what had
+ previously existed. It was only when it became necessary to forsake pure
+ negation, and to create something, that the conceptions became clearer,
+ and a variety of opinions appeared. At the first moment there was merely
+ unanimity in negation, and an impulsive enthusiasm for beneficent reforms
+ in general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first specific proposals were direct deductions from the lessons
+ taught by the war. The war had shown in a terrible way the disastrous
+ consequences of having merely primitive means of communication; the Press
+ and the public began, accordingly, to speak about the necessity of
+ constructing railways, roads and river-steamers. The war had shown that a
+ country which has not developed its natural resources very soon becomes
+ exhausted if it has to make a great national effort; accordingly the
+ public and the Press talked about the necessity of developing the natural
+ resources, and about the means by which this desirable end might be
+ attained. It had been shown by the war that a system of education which
+ tends to make men mere apathetic automata cannot produce even a good army;
+ accordingly the public and the Press began to discuss the different
+ systems of education and the numerous questions of pedagogical science. It
+ had been shown by the war that the best intentions of a Government will
+ necessarily be frustrated if the majority of the officials are dishonest
+ or incapable; accordingly the public and the Press began to speak about
+ the paramount necessity of reforming the Administration in all its
+ branches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must not, however, be supposed that in thus laying to heart the lessons
+ taught by the war and endeavouring to profit by them, the Russians were
+ actuated by warlike feelings, and desired to avenge themselves as soon as
+ possible on their victorious enemies. On the contrary, the whole movement
+ and the spirit which animated it were eminently pacific. Prince
+ Gortchakof's saying, "La Russie ne boude pas, elle se recueille," was more
+ than a diplomatic repartee&mdash;it was a true and graphic statement of
+ the case. Though the Russians are very inflammable, and can be very
+ violent when their patriotic feelings are aroused, they are, individually
+ and as a nation, singularly free from rancour and the spirit of revenge.
+ After the termination of hostilities they really bore little malice
+ towards the Western Powers, except towards Austria, which was believed to
+ have been treacherous and ungrateful to the country that had saved her in
+ 1849. Their patriotism now took the form, not of revenge, but of a desire
+ to raise their country to the level of the Western nations. If they
+ thought of military matters at all, they assumed that military power would
+ be obtained as a natural and inevitable result of high civilisation and
+ good government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a first step towards the realisation of the vast schemes contemplated,
+ voluntary associations began to be formed for industrial and commercial
+ purposes, and a law was issued for the creation of limited liability
+ companies. In the space of two years forty-seven companies of this kind
+ were founded, with a combined capital of 358 millions of roubles. To
+ understand the full significance of these figures, we must know that from
+ the founding of the first joint-stock company in 1799 down to 1853 only
+ twenty-six companies had been formed, and their united capital amounted
+ only to thirty-two millions of roubles. Thus in the space of two years
+ (1857-58) eleven times as much capital was subscribed to joint-stock
+ companies as had been subscribed during half a century previous to the
+ war. The most exaggerated expectations were entertained as to the national
+ and private advantages which must necessarily result from these
+ undertakings, and it became a patriotic duty to subscribe liberally. The
+ periodical literature depicted in glowing terms the marvellous results
+ that had been obtained in other countries by the principle of
+ co-operation, and sanguine readers believed that they had discovered a
+ patriotic way of speedily becoming rich.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were, however, mere secondary matters, and the public were anxiously
+ waiting for the Government to begin the grand reforming campaign. When the
+ educated classes awoke to the necessity of great reforms, there was no
+ clear conception as to how the great work should be undertaken. There was
+ so much to be done that it was no easy matter to decide what should be
+ done first. Administrative, judicial, social, economical, financial, and
+ political reforms seemed all equally pressing. Gradually, however, it
+ became evident that precedence must be given to the question of serfage.
+ It was absurd to speak about progress, humanitarianism, education,
+ self-government, equality in the eye of the law, and similar matters, so
+ long as one half of the population was excluded from the enjoyment of
+ ordinary civil rights. So long as serfage existed it was mere mockery to
+ talk about re-organising Russia according to the latest results of
+ political and social science. How could a system of even-handed justice be
+ introduced when twenty millions of the peasantry were subject to the
+ arbitrary will of the landed proprietors? How could agricultural or
+ industrial progress be made without free labour? How could the Government
+ take active measures for the spread of national education when it had no
+ direct control over one-half of the peasantry? Above all, how could it be
+ hoped that a great moral regeneration could take place, so long as the
+ nation voluntarily retained the stigma of serfage and slavery?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this was very generally felt by the educated classes, but no one
+ ventured to raise the question until it should be known what were the
+ views of the Emperor on the subject. How the question was gradually
+ raised, how it was treated by the nobles, and how it was ultimately solved
+ by the famous law of February 19th (March 3d), 1861,* I now propose to
+ relate.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * February 19th according to the old style, which is still
+ used in Russia, and March 3d according to our method of
+ reckoning.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE SERFS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The Rural Population in Ancient Times&mdash;The Peasantry in the
+ Eighteenth Century&mdash;How Was This Change Effected?&mdash;The Common
+ Explanation Inaccurate&mdash;Serfage the Result of Permanent Economic and
+ Political Causes&mdash;Origin of the Adscriptio Glebae&mdash;Its
+ Consequences&mdash;Serf Insurrection&mdash;Turning-point in the History of
+ Serfage&mdash;Serfage in Russia and in Western Europe&mdash;State Peasants&mdash;Numbers
+ and Geographical Distribution of the Serf Population&mdash;Serf Dues&mdash;Legal
+ and Actual Power of the Proprietors&mdash;The Serfs' Means of Defence&mdash;Fugitives&mdash;Domestic
+ Serfs&mdash;Strange Advertisements in the Moscow Gazette&mdash;Moral
+ Influence of Serfage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before proceeding to describe the Emancipation, it may be well to explain
+ briefly how the Russian peasants became serfs, and what serfage in Russia
+ really was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the earliest period of Russian history the rural population was
+ composed of three distinct classes. At the bottom of the scale stood the
+ slaves, who were very numerous. Their numbers were continually augmented
+ by prisoners of war, by freemen who voluntarily sold themselves as slaves,
+ by insolvent debtors, and by certain categories of criminals. Immediately
+ above the slaves were the free agricultural labourers, who had no
+ permanent domicile, but wandered about the country and settled temporarily
+ where they happened to find work and satisfactory remuneration. In the
+ third place, distinct from these two classes, and in some respects higher
+ in the social scale, were the peasants properly so called.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * My chief authority for the early history of the peasantry
+ has been Belaef, "Krestyanye na Rusi," Moscow, 1860; a most
+ able and conscientious work.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ These peasants proper, who may be roughly described as small farmers or
+ cottiers, were distinguished from the free agricultural labourers in two
+ respects: they were possessors of land in property or usufruct, and they
+ were members of a rural Commune. The Communes were free primitive
+ corporations which elected their office-bearers from among the heads of
+ families, and sent delegates to act as judges or assessors in the Prince's
+ Court. Some of the Communes possessed land of their own, whilst others
+ were settled on the estates of the landed proprietors or on the extensive
+ domains of the monasteries. In the latter case the peasant paid a fixed
+ yearly rent in money, in produce, or in labour, according to the terms of
+ his contract with the proprietor or the monastery; but he did not thereby
+ sacrifice in any way his personal liberty. As soon as he had fulfilled the
+ engagements stipulated in the contract and had settled accounts with the
+ owner of the land, he was free to change his domicile as he pleased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we turn now from these early times to the eighteenth century, we find
+ that the position of the rural population has entirely changed in the
+ interval. The distinction between slaves, agricultural labourers, and
+ peasants has completely disappeared. All three categories have melted
+ together into a common class, called serfs, who are regarded as the
+ property of the landed proprietors or of the State. "The proprietors sell
+ their peasants and domestic servants not even in families, but one by one,
+ like cattle, as is done nowhere else in the whole world, from which
+ practice there is not a little wailing."* And yet the Government, whilst
+ professing to regret the existence of the practice, takes no energetic
+ measures to prevent it. On the contrary, it deprives the serfs of all
+ legal protection, and expressly commands that if any serf shall dare to
+ present a petition against his master, he shall be punished with the knout
+ and transported for life to the mines of Nertchinsk. (Ukaz of August 22d,
+ 1767.**)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * These words are taken from an Imperial ukaz of April 15th,
+ 1721. Polnoye Sobranye Zakonov, No. 3,770.
+
+ ** This is an ukaz of the liberal and tolerant Catherine!
+ How she reconciled it with her respect and admiration for
+ Beccaria's humane views on criminal law she does not
+ explain.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ How did this important change take place, and how is it to be explained?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we ask any educated Russian who has never specially occupied himself
+ with historical investigations regarding the origin of serfage in Russia,
+ he will probably reply somewhat in this fashion:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In Russia slavery has never existed (!), and even serfage in the
+ West-European sense has never been recognised by law! In ancient times the
+ rural population was completely free, and every peasant might change his
+ domicile on St. George's Day&mdash;that is to say, at the end of the
+ agricultural year. This right of migration was abolished by Tsar Boris
+ Godunof&mdash;who, by the way, was half a Tartar and more than half a
+ usurper&mdash;and herein lies the essence of serfage in the Russian sense.
+ The peasants have never been the property of the landed proprietors, but
+ have always been personally free; and the only legal restriction on their
+ liberty was that they were not allowed to change their domicile without
+ the permission of the proprietor. If so-called serfs were sometimes sold,
+ the practice was simply an abuse not justified by legislation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This simple explanation, in which may be detected a note of patriotic
+ pride, is almost universally accepted in Russia; but it contains, like
+ most popular conceptions of the distant past, a curious mixture of fact
+ and fiction. Serious historical investigation tends to show that the power
+ of the proprietors over the peasants came into existence, not suddenly, as
+ the result of an ukaz, but gradually, as a consequence of permanent
+ economic and political causes, and that Boris Godunof was not more to
+ blame than many of his predecessors and successors.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * See especially Pobedonostsef, in the Russki Vestnik, 1858,
+ No. 11, and "Istoritcheskiya izsledovaniya i statyi" (St.
+ Petersburg, 1876), by the same author; also Pogodin, in the
+ Russkaya Beseda, 1858, No. 4.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Although the peasants in ancient Russia were free to wander about as they
+ chose, there appeared at a very early period&mdash;long before the reign
+ of Boris Godunof&mdash;a decided tendency in the Princes, in the
+ proprietors, and in the Communes, to prevent migration. This tendency will
+ be easily understood if we remember that land without labourers is
+ useless, and that in Russia at that time the population was small in
+ comparison with the amount of reclaimed and easily reclaimable land. The
+ Prince desired to have as many inhabitants as possible in his
+ principality, because the amount of his regular revenues depended on the
+ number of the population. The landed proprietor desired to have as many
+ peasants as possible on his estate, to till for him the land which he
+ reserved for his own use, and to pay him for the remainder a yearly rent
+ in money, produce, or labour. The free Communes desired to have a number
+ of members sufficient to keep the whole of the Communal land under
+ cultivation, because each Commune had to pay yearly to the Prince a fixed
+ sum in money or agricultural produce, and the greater the number of
+ able-bodied members, the less each individual had to pay. To use the
+ language of political economy, the Princes, the landed proprietors, and
+ the free Communes all appeared as buyers in the labour market; and the
+ demand was far in excess of the supply. Nowadays when young colonies or
+ landed proprietors in an outlying corner of the world are similarly in
+ need of labour, they seek to supply the want by organising a regular
+ system of importing labourers&mdash;using illegal violent means, such as
+ kidnapping expeditions, merely as an exceptional expedient. In old Russia
+ any such regularly organised system was impossible, and consequently
+ illegal or violent measures were not the exception, but the rule. The
+ chief practical advantage of the frequent military expeditions for those
+ who took part in them was the acquisition of prisoners of war, who were
+ commonly transformed into slaves by their captors. If it be true, as some
+ assert, that only unbaptised prisoners were legally considered lawful
+ booty, it is certain that in practice, before the unification of the
+ principalities under the Tsars of Moscow, little distinction was made in
+ this respect between unbaptised foreigners and Orthodox Russians.* A
+ similar method was sometimes employed for the acquisition of free
+ peasants: the more powerful proprietors organised kidnapping expeditions,
+ and carried off by force the peasants settled on the land of their weaker
+ neighbours.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * On this subject see Tchitcherin, "Opyty po istorii
+ Russkago prava," Moscow, 1858, p. 162 et seq.; and
+ Lokhvitski, "O plennykh po drevnemu Russkomu pravu," Moscow,
+ 1855.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Under these circumstances it was only natural that those who possessed
+ this valuable commodity should do all in their power to keep it. Many, if
+ not all, of the free Communes adopted the simple measure of refusing to
+ allow a member to depart until he had found some one to take his place.
+ The proprietors never, so far as we know, laid down formally such a
+ principle, but in practice they did all in their power to retain the
+ peasants actually settled on their estates. For this purpose some simply
+ employed force, whilst others acted under cover of legal formalities. The
+ peasant who accepted land from a proprietor rarely brought with him the
+ necessary implements, cattle, and capital to begin at once his
+ occupations, and to feed himself and his family till the ensuing harvest.
+ He was obliged, therefore, to borrow from his landlord, and the debt thus
+ contracted was easily converted into a means of preventing his departure
+ if he wished to change his domicile. We need not enter into further
+ details. The proprietors were the capitalists of the time. Frequent bad
+ harvests, plagues, fires, military raids, and similar misfortunes often
+ reduced even prosperous peasants to beggary. The muzhik was probably then,
+ as now, only too ready to accept a loan without taking the necessary
+ precautions for repaying it. The laws relating to debt were terribly
+ severe, and there was no powerful judicial organisation to protect the
+ weak. If we remember all this, we shall not be surprised to learn that a
+ considerable part of the peasantry were practically serfs before serfage
+ was recognised by law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So long as the country was broken up into independent principalities, and
+ each land-owner was almost an independent Prince on his estate, the
+ peasants easily found a remedy for these abuses in flight. They fled to a
+ neighbouring proprietor who could protect them from their former landlord
+ and his claims, or they took refuge in a neighbouring principality, where
+ they were, of course, still safer. All this was changed when the
+ independent principalities were transformed into the Tsardom of Muscovy.
+ The Tsars had new reasons for opposing the migration of the peasants and
+ new means for preventing it. The old Princes had simply given grants of
+ land to those who served them, and left the grantee to do with his land
+ what seemed good to him; the Tsars, on the contrary, gave to those who
+ served them merely the usufruct of a certain quantity of land, and
+ carefully proportioned the quantity to the rank and the obligations of the
+ receiver. In this change there was plainly a new reason for fixing the
+ peasants to the soil. The real value of a grant depended not so much on
+ the amount of land as on the number of peasants settled on it, and hence
+ any migration of the population was tantamount to a removal of the ancient
+ landmarks&mdash;that is to say, to a disturbance of the arrangements made
+ by the Tsar. Suppose, for instance, that the Tsar granted to a Boyar or
+ some lesser dignitary an estate on which were settled twenty peasant
+ families, and that afterwards ten of these emigrated to neighbouring
+ proprietors. In this case the recipient might justly complain that he had
+ lost half of his estate&mdash;though the amount of land was in no way
+ diminished&mdash;and that he was consequently unable to fulfil his
+ obligations. Such complaints would be rarely, if ever, made by the great
+ dignitaries, for they had the means of attracting peasants to their
+ estates;* but the small proprietors had good reason to complain, and the
+ Tsar was bound to remove their grievances. The attaching of the peasants
+ to the soil was, in fact, the natural consequence of feudal tenures&mdash;an
+ integral part of the Muscovite political system. The Tsar compelled the
+ nobles to serve him, and was unable to pay them in money. He was obliged,
+ therefore, to procure for them some other means of livelihood. Evidently
+ the simplest method of solving the difficulty was to give them land, with
+ a certain number of labourers, and to prevent the labourers from
+ migrating.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * There are plain indications in the documents of the time
+ that the great dignitaries were at first hostile to the
+ adscriptio glebae. We find a similar phenomenon at a much
+ more recent date in Little Russia. Long after serfage had
+ been legalised in that region by Catherine II., the great
+ proprietors, such as Rumyantsef, Razumofski, Bezborodko,
+ continued to attract to their estates the peasants of the
+ smaller proprietors. See the article of Pogodin in the
+ Russkaya Beseda, 1858, No. 4, p. 154.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Towards the free Communes the Tsar had to act in the same way for similar
+ reasons. The Communes, like the nobles, had obligations to the Sovereign,
+ and could not fulfil them if the peasants were allowed to migrate from one
+ locality to another. They were, in a certain sense, the property of the
+ Tsar, and it was only natural that the Tsar should do for himself what he
+ had done for his nobles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these new reasons for fixing the peasants to the soil came, as has
+ been said, new means of preventing migration. Formerly it was an easy
+ matter to flee to a neighbouring principality, but now all the
+ principalities were combined under one ruler, and the foundations of a
+ centralised administration were laid. Severe fugitive laws were issued
+ against those who attempted to change their domicile and against the
+ proprietors who should harbour the runaways. Unless the peasant chose to
+ face the difficulties of "squatting" in the inhospitable northern forests,
+ or resolved to brave the dangers of the steppe, he could nowhere escape
+ the heavy hand of Moscow.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The above account of the origin of serfage in Russia is
+ founded on a careful examination of the evidence which we
+ possess on the subject, but I must not conceal the fact that
+ some of the statements are founded on inference rather than
+ on direct, unequivocal documentary evidence. The whole
+ question is one of great difficulty, and will in all
+ probability not be satisfactorily solved until a large
+ number of the old local Land-Registers (Pistsoviya Knigi)
+ have been published and carefully studied.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The indirect consequences of thus attaching the peasants to the soil did
+ not at once become apparent. The serf retained all the civil rights he had
+ hitherto enjoyed, except that of changing his domicile. He could still
+ appear before the courts of law as a free man, freely engage in trade or
+ industry, enter into all manner of contracts, and rent land for
+ cultivation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as time wore on, the change in the legal relation between the two
+ classes became apparent in real life. In attaching the peasantry to the
+ soil, the Government had been so thoroughly engrossed with the direct
+ financial aim that it entirely overlooked, or wilfully shut its eyes to,
+ the ulterior consequences which must necessarily flow from the policy it
+ adopted. It was evident that as soon as the relation between proprietor
+ and peasant was removed from the region of voluntary contract by being
+ rendered indissoluble, the weaker of the two parties legally tied together
+ must fall completely under the power of the stronger, unless energetically
+ protected by the law and the Administration. To this inevitable
+ consequence the Government paid no attention. So far from endeavouring to
+ protect the peasantry from the oppression of the proprietors, it did not
+ even determine by law the mutual obligations which ought to exist between
+ the two classes. Taking advantage of this omission, the proprietors soon
+ began to impose whatever obligations they thought fit; and as they had no
+ legal means of enforcing fulfilment, they gradually introduced a
+ patriarchal jurisdiction similar to that which they exercised over their
+ slaves, with fines and corporal punishment as means of coercion. From this
+ they ere long proceeded a step further, and began to sell their peasants
+ without the land on which they were settled. At first this was merely a
+ flagrant abuse unsanctioned by law, for the peasant had never been
+ declared the private property of the landed proprietor; but the Government
+ tacitly sanctioned the practice, and even exacted dues on such sales, as
+ on the sale of slaves. Finally the right to sell peasants without land was
+ formally recognised by various Imperial ukazes.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * For instance, the ukazes of October 13th, 1675, and June
+ 25th, 1682. See Belaef, pp. 203-209.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The old Communal organisation still existed on the estates of the
+ proprietors, and had never been legally deprived of its authority, but it
+ was now powerless to protect the members. The proprietor could easily
+ overcome any active resistance by selling or converting into domestic
+ servants the peasants who dared to oppose his will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The peasantry had thus sunk to the condition of serfs, practically
+ deprived of legal protection and subject to the arbitrary will of the
+ proprietors; but they were still in some respects legally and actually
+ distinguished from the slaves on the one hand and the "free wandering
+ people" on the other. These distinctions were obliterated by Peter the
+ Great and his immediate successors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To effect his great civil and military reforms, Peter required an annual
+ revenue such as his predecessors had never dreamed of, and he was
+ consequently always on the look-out for some new object of taxation. When
+ looking about for this purpose, his eye naturally fell on the slaves, the
+ domestic servants, and the free agricultural labourers. None of these
+ classes paid taxes&mdash;a fact which stood in flagrant contradiction with
+ his fundamental principle of polity, that every subject should in some way
+ serve the State. He caused, therefore, a national census to be taken, in
+ which all the various classes of the rural population&mdash;slaves,
+ domestic servants, agricultural labourers, peasants&mdash;should be
+ inscribed in one category; and he imposed equally on all the members of
+ this category a poll-tax, in lieu of the former land-tax, which had lain
+ exclusively on the peasants. To facilitate the collection of this tax the
+ proprietors were made responsible for their serfs; and the "free wandering
+ people" who did not wish to enter the army were ordered, under pain of
+ being sent to the galleys, to inscribe themselves as members of a Commune
+ or as serfs to some proprietor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These measures had a considerable influence, if not on the actual position
+ of the peasantry, at least on the legal conceptions regarding them. By
+ making the proprietor pay the poll-tax for his serfs, as if they were
+ slaves or cattle, the law seemed to sanction the idea that they were part
+ of his goods and chattels. Besides this, it introduced the entirely new
+ principle that any member of the rural population not legally attached to
+ the land or to a proprietor should be regarded as a vagrant, and treated
+ accordingly. Thus the principle that every subject should in some way
+ serve the State had found its complete realisation. There was no longer
+ any room in Russia for free men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The change in the position of the peasantry, together with the hardships
+ and oppression by which it was accompanied, naturally increased fugitivism
+ and vagrancy. Thousands of serfs ran away from their masters and fled to
+ the steppe or sought enrolment in the army. To prevent this the Government
+ considered it necessary to take severe and energetic measures. The serfs
+ were forbidden to enlist without the permission of their masters, and
+ those who persisted in presenting themselves for enrolment were to be
+ beaten "cruelly" (zhestoko) with the knout, and sent to the mines.* The
+ proprietors, on the other hand, received the right to transport without
+ trial their unruly serfs to Siberia, and even to send them to the mines
+ for life.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Ukaz of June 2d, 1742.
+
+ ** See ukaz of January 17th, 1765, and of January 28th,
+ 1766.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ If these stringent measures had any effect it was not of long duration,
+ for there soon appeared among the serfs a still stronger spirit of
+ discontent and insubordination, which threatened to produce a general
+ agrarian rising, and actually did create a movement resembling in many
+ respects the Jacquerie in France and the Peasant War in Germany. A glance
+ at the causes of this movement will help us to understand the real nature
+ of serfage in Russia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up to this point serfage had, in spite of its flagrant abuses, a certain
+ theoretical justification. It was, as we have seen, merely a part of a
+ general political system in which obligatory service was imposed on all
+ classes of the population. The serfs served the nobles in order that the
+ nobles might serve the Tsar. In 1762 this theory was entirely overturned
+ by a manifesto of Peter III. abolishing the obligatory service of the
+ Noblesse. According to strict justice this act ought to have been followed
+ by the liberation of the serfs, for if the nobles were no longer obliged
+ to serve the State they had no just claim to the service of the peasants.
+ The Government had so completely forgotten the original meaning of serfage
+ that it never thought of carrying out the measure to its logical
+ consequences, but the peasantry held tenaciously to the ancient
+ conceptions, and looked impatiently for a second manifesto liberating them
+ from the power of the proprietors. Reports were spread that such a
+ manifesto really existed, and was being concealed by the nobles. A spirit
+ of insubordination accordingly appeared among the rural population, and
+ local insurrections broke out in several parts of the Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this critical moment Peter III. was dethroned and assassinated by a
+ Court conspiracy. The peasants, who, of course, knew nothing of the real
+ motives of the conspirators, supposed that the Tsar had been assassinated
+ by those who wished to preserve serfage, and believed him to be a martyr
+ in the cause of Emancipation. At the news of the catastrophe their hopes
+ of Emancipation fell, but soon they were revived by new rumours. The Tsar,
+ it was said, had escaped from the conspirators and was in hiding. Soon he
+ would appear among his faithful peasants, and with their aid would regain
+ his throne and punish the wicked oppressors. Anxiously he was awaited, and
+ at last the glad tidings came that he had appeared in the Don country,
+ that thousands of Cossacks had joined his standard, that he was everywhere
+ putting the proprietors to death without mercy, and that he would soon
+ arrive in the ancient capital!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter III. was in reality in his grave, but there was a terrible element
+ of truth in these reports. A pretender, a Cossack called Pugatchef, had
+ really appeared on the Don, and had assumed the role which the peasants
+ expected the late Tsar to play. Advancing through the country of the Lower
+ Volga, he took several places of importance, put to death all the
+ proprietors he could find, defeated on more than one occasion the troops
+ sent against him, and threatened to advance into the heart of the Empire.
+ It seemed as if the old troublous times were about to be renewed&mdash;as
+ if the country was once more to be pillaged by those wild Cossacks of the
+ southern steppe. But the pretender showed himself incapable of playing the
+ part he had assumed. His inhuman cruelty estranged many who would
+ otherwise have followed him, and he was too deficient in decision and
+ energy to take advantage of favourable circumstances. If it be true that
+ he conceived the idea of creating a peasant empire (muzhitskoe tsarstvo),
+ he was not the man to realise such a scheme. After a series of mistakes
+ and defeats he was taken prisoner, and the insurrection was quelled.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ *Whilst living among the Bashkirs of the province of Samara
+ in 1872 I found some interesting traditions regarding this
+ pretender. Though nearly a century had elapsed since his
+ death (1775), his name, his personal appearance, and his
+ exploits were well known even to the younger generation. My
+ informants firmly believed that he was not an impostor, but
+ the genuine Tsar, dethroned by his ambitious consort, and
+ that he never was taken prisoner, but "went away into
+ foreign lands." When I asked whether he was still alive,
+ and whether he might not one day return, they replied that
+ they did not know.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Peter III. had been succeeded by his consort, Catherine II. As
+ she had no legal right to the throne, and was by birth a foreigner, she
+ could not gain the affections of the people, and was obliged to court the
+ favour of the Noblesse. In such a difficult position she could not venture
+ to apply her humane principles to the question of serfage. Even during the
+ first years of her reign, when she had no reason to fear agrarian
+ disturbances, she increased rather than diminished the power of the
+ proprietors over their serfs, and the Pugatchef affair confirmed her in
+ this line of policy. During her reign serfage may be said to have reached
+ its climax. The serfs were regarded by the law as part of the master's
+ immovable property*&mdash;as part of the working capital of the estate&mdash;and
+ as such they were bought, sold, and given as presents** in hundreds and
+ thousands, sometimes with the land, and sometimes without it, sometimes in
+ families, and sometimes individually. The only legal restriction was that
+ they should not be offered for sale at the time of the conscription, and
+ that they should at no time be sold publicly by auction, because such a
+ custom was considered as "unbecoming in a European State." In all other
+ respects the serfs might be treated as private property; and this view is
+ to be found not only in the legislation, but also in the popular
+ conceptions. It became customary&mdash;a custom that continued down to the
+ year 1861&mdash;to compute a noble's fortune, not by his yearly revenue or
+ the extent of his estate, but by the number of his serfs. Instead of
+ saying that a man had so many hundreds or thousands a year, or so many
+ acres, it was commonly said that he had so many hundreds or thousands of
+ "souls." And over these "souls" he exercised the most unlimited authority.
+ The serfs had no legal means of self-defence. The Government feared that
+ the granting to them of judicial or administrative protection would
+ inevitably awaken in them a spirit of insubordination, and hence it was
+ ordered that those who presented complaints should be punished with the
+ knout and sent to the mines.*** It was only in extreme cases, when some
+ instance of atrocious cruelty happened to reach the ears of the Sovereign,
+ that the authorities interfered with the proprietor's jurisdiction, and
+ these cases had not the slightest influence on the proprietors in
+ general.****
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * See ukaz of October 7th, 1792.
+
+ ** As an example of making presents of serfs, the following
+ may be cited. Count Panin presented some of his
+ subordinates for an Imperial recompense, and on receiving a
+ refusal, made them a present of 4000 serfs from his own
+ estates.&mdash;Belaef, p. 320.
+
+ *** See the ukazes of August 22d, 1767, and March 30th,
+ 1781.
+
+ **** Perhaps the most horrible case on record is that of a
+ certain lady called Saltykof, who was brought to justice in
+ 1768. According to the ukaz regarding her crimes, she had
+ killed by inhuman tortures in the course of ten or eleven
+ years about a hundred of her serfs, chiefly of the female
+ sex, and among them several young girls of eleven and twelve
+ years of age. According to popular belief her cruelty
+ proceeded from cannibal propensities, but this was not
+ confirmed by the judicial investigation. Details in the
+ Russki Arkhiv, 1865, pp. 644-652. The atrocities practised
+ on the estate of Count Araktcheyef, the favourite of
+ Alexander I. at the commencement of last century, have been
+ frequently described, and are scarcely less revolting.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The last years of the eighteenth century may be regarded as the
+ turning-point in the history of serfage. Up till that time the power of
+ the proprietors had steadily increased, and the area of serfage had
+ rapidly expanded. Under the Emperor Paul (1796-1801) we find the first
+ decided symptoms of a reaction. He regarded the proprietors as his most
+ efficient officers of police, but he desired to limit their authority, and
+ for this purpose issued an ukaz to the effect that the serfs should not be
+ forced to work for their masters more than three days in the week. With
+ the accession of Alexander I., in 1801, commenced a long series of
+ abortive projects for a general emancipation, and endless attempts to
+ correct the more glaring abuses; and during the reign of Nicholas no less
+ than six committees were formed at different times to consider the
+ question. But the practical result of these efforts was extremely small.
+ The custom of giving grants of land with peasants was abolished; certain
+ slight restrictions were placed on the authority of the proprietors; a
+ number of the worst specimens of the class were removed from the
+ administration of their estates; a few who were convicted of atrocious
+ cruelty were exiled to Siberia;* and some thousands of serfs were actually
+ emancipated; but no decisive radical measures were attempted, and the
+ serfs did not receive even the right of making formal complaints. Serfage
+ had, in fact, come to be regarded as a vital part of the State
+ organisation, and the only sure basis for autocracy. It was therefore
+ treated tenderly, and the rights and protection accorded by various ukazes
+ were almost entirely illusory.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ *Speranski, for instance, when Governor of the province of
+ Penza, brought to justice, among others, a proprietor who
+ had caused one of his serfs to be flogged to death, and a
+ lady who had murdered a serf boy by pricking him with a
+ pen-knife because he had neglected to take proper care of a tame
+ rabbit committed to his charge!&mdash;Korff, "Zhizn Speranskago,"
+ II., p. 127, note.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ If we compare the development of serfage in Russia and in Western Europe,
+ we find very many points in common, but in Russia the movement had certain
+ peculiarities. One of the most important of these was caused by the rapid
+ development of the Autocratic Power. In feudal Europe, where there was no
+ strong central authority to control the Noblesse, the free rural Communes
+ entirely, or almost entirely, disappeared. They were either appropriated
+ by the nobles or voluntarily submitted to powerful landed proprietors or
+ to monasteries, and in this way the whole of the reclaimed land, with a
+ few rare exceptions, became the property of the nobles or of the Church.
+ In Russia we find the same movement, but it was arrested by the Imperial
+ power before all the land had been appropriated. The nobles could reduce
+ to serfage the peasants settled on their estates, but they could not take
+ possession of the free Communes, because such an appropriation would have
+ infringed the rights and diminished the revenues of the Tsar. Down to the
+ commencement of the last century, it is true, large grants of land with
+ serfs were made to favoured individuals among the Noblesse, and in the
+ reign of Paul (1796-1801) a considerable number of estates were affected
+ to the use of the Imperial family under the name of appanages (Udyelniya
+ imteniya); but on the other hand, the extensive Church lands, when
+ secularised by Catherine II., were not distributed among the nobles, as in
+ many other countries, but were transformed into State Domains. Thus, at
+ the date of the Emancipation (1861), by far the greater part of the
+ territory belonged to the State, and one-half of the rural population were
+ so-called State Peasants (Gosudarstvenniye krestyanye).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Regarding the condition of these State Peasants, or Peasants of the
+ Domains, as they are sometimes called, I may say briefly that they were,
+ in a certain sense, serfs, being attached to the soil like the others; but
+ their condition was, as a rule, somewhat better than the serfs in the
+ narrower acceptation of the term. They had to suffer much from the tyranny
+ and extortion of the special administration under which they lived, but
+ they had more land and more liberty than was commonly enjoyed on the
+ estates of resident proprietors, and their position was much less
+ precarious. It is often asserted that the officials of the Domains were
+ worse than the serf-owners, because they had not the same interest in the
+ prosperity of the peasantry; but this a priori reasoning does not stand
+ the test of experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not a little interesting to observe the numerical proportion and
+ geographical distribution of these two rural classes. In European Russia,
+ as a whole, about three-eighths of the population were composed of serfs
+ belonging to the nobles;* but if we take the provinces separately we find
+ great variations from this average. In five provinces the serfs were less
+ than three per cent., while in others they formed more than seventy per
+ cent. of the population! This is not an accidental phenomenon. In the
+ geographical distribution of serfage we can see reflected the origin and
+ history of the institution.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The exact numbers, according to official data, were&mdash;Entire
+ Population 60,909,309
+ Peasantry of all Classes 49,486,665
+
+ Of these latter there were&mdash;State Peasants
+ 23,138,191
+ Peasants on the Lands of Proprietors 23,022,390
+ Peasants of the Appanages and other Departments 3,326,084
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ 49,486,665
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ If we were to construct a map showing the geographical distribution of the
+ serf population, we should at once perceive that serfage radiated from
+ Moscow. Starting from that city as a centre and travelling in any
+ direction towards the confines of the Empire, we find that, after making
+ allowance for a few disturbing local influences, the proportion of serfs
+ regularly declines in the successive provinces traversed. In the region
+ representing the old Muscovite Tsardom they form considerably more than a
+ half of the rural population. Immediately to the south and east of this,
+ in the territory that was gradually annexed during the seventeenth and
+ first half of the eighteenth century, the proportion varies from
+ twenty-five to fifty per cent., and in the more recently annexed provinces
+ it steadily decreases till it almost reaches zero.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may perceive, too, that the percentage of serfs decreases towards the
+ north much more rapidly than towards the east and south. This points to
+ the essentially agricultural nature of serfage in its infancy. In the
+ south and east there was abundance of rich "black earth" celebrated for
+ its fertility, and the nobles in quest of estates naturally preferred this
+ region to the inhospitable north, with its poor soil and severe climate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A more careful examination of the supposed map* would bring out other
+ interesting facts. Let me notice one by way of illustration. Had serfage
+ been the result of conquest we should have found the Slavonic race settled
+ on the State Domains, and the Finnish and Tartar tribes supplying the
+ serfs of the nobles. In reality we find quite the reverse; the Finns and
+ Tartars were nearly all State Peasants, and the serfs of the proprietors
+ were nearly all of Slavonic race. This is to be accounted for by the fact
+ that the Finnish and Tartar tribes inhabit chiefly the outlying regions,
+ in which serfage never attained such dimensions as in the centre of the
+ Empire.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Such a map was actually constructed by Troinitski
+ ("Krepostnoe Naseleniye v Rossii," St. Petersburg, 1861),
+ but it is not nearly so graphic as is might have been.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The dues paid by the serfs were of three kinds: labour, money, and farm
+ produce. The last-named is so unimportant that it may be dismissed in a
+ few words. It consisted chiefly of eggs, chickens, lambs, mushrooms, wild
+ berries, and linen cloth. The amount of these various products depended
+ entirely on the will of the master. The other two kinds of dues, as more
+ important, we must examine more closely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When a proprietor had abundance of fertile land and wished to farm on his
+ own account, he commonly demanded from his serfs as much labour as
+ possible. Under such a master the serfs were probably free from money
+ dues, and fulfilled their obligations to him by labouring in his fields in
+ summer and transporting his grain to market in winter. When, on the
+ contrary, a land-owner had more serf labour at his disposal than he
+ required for the cultivation of his fields, he put the superfluous serfs
+ "on obrok,"&mdash;that is to say, he allowed them to go and work where
+ they pleased on condition of paying him a fixed yearly sum. Sometimes the
+ proprietor did not farm at all on his own account, in which case he put
+ all the serfs "on obrok," and generally gave to the Commune in usufruct
+ the whole of the arable land and pasturage. In this way the Mir played the
+ part of a tenant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have here the basis for a simple and important classification of
+ estates in the time of serfage: (1) Estates on which the dues were
+ exclusively in labour; (2) estates on which the dues were partly in labour
+ and partly in money; and (3) estates on which the dues were exclusively in
+ money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the manner of exacting the labour dues there was considerable variety.
+ According to the famous manifesto of Paul I., the peasant could not be
+ compelled to work more than three days in the week; but this law was by no
+ means universally observed, and those who did observe it had various
+ methods of applying it. A few took it literally and laid down a rule that
+ the serfs should work for them three definite days in the week&mdash;for
+ example, every Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday&mdash;but this was an
+ extremely inconvenient method, for it prevented the field labour from
+ being carried on regularly. A much more rational system was that according
+ to which one-half of the serfs worked the first three days of the week,
+ and the other half the remaining three. In this way there was, without any
+ contravention of the law, a regular and constant supply of labour. It
+ seems, however, that the great majority of the proprietors followed no
+ strict method, and paid no attention whatever to Paul's manifesto, which
+ gave to the peasants no legal means of making formal complaints. They
+ simply summoned daily as many labourers as they required. The evil
+ consequences of this for the peasants' crops were in part counteracted by
+ making the peasants sow their own grain a little later than that of the
+ proprietor, so that the master's harvest work was finished, or nearly
+ finished, before their grain was ripe. This combination did not, however,
+ always succeed, and in cases where there was a conflict of interests, the
+ serf was, of course, the losing party. All that remained for him to do in
+ such cases was to work a little in his own fields before six o'clock in
+ the morning and after nine o'clock at night, and in order to render this
+ possible he economised his strength, and worked as little as possible in
+ his master's fields during the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has frequently been remarked, and with much truth&mdash;though the
+ indiscriminate application of the principle has often led to unjustifiable
+ legislative inactivity&mdash;that the practical result of institutions
+ depends less on the intrinsic abstract nature of the institutions
+ themselves than on the character of those who work them. So it was with
+ serfage. When a proprietor habitually acted towards his serfs in an
+ enlightened, rational, humane way, they had little reason to complain of
+ their position, and their life was much easier than that of many men who
+ live in a state of complete individual freedom and unlimited, unrestricted
+ competition. However paradoxical the statement may seem to those who are
+ in the habit of regarding all forms of slavery from the sentimental point
+ of view, it is unquestionable that the condition of serfs under such a
+ proprietor as I have supposed was more enviable than that of the majority
+ of English agricultural labourers. Each family had a house of its own,
+ with a cabbage-garden, one or more horses, one or two cows, several sheep,
+ poultry, agricultural implements, a share of the Communal land, and
+ everything else necessary for carrying on its small farming operations;
+ and in return for this it had to supply the proprietor with an amount of
+ labour which was by no means oppressive. If, for instance, a serf had
+ three adult sons&mdash;and the households, as I have said, were at that
+ time generally numerous&mdash;two of them might work for the proprietor
+ whilst he himself and the remaining son could attend exclusively to the
+ family affairs. By the events which used to be called "the visitations of
+ God" he had no fear of being permanently ruined. If his house was burnt,
+ or his cattle died from the plague, or a series of "bad years" left him
+ without seed for his fields, he could always count upon temporary
+ assistance from his master. He was protected, too, against all oppression
+ and exactions on the part of the officials; for the police, when there was
+ any call for its interference, applied to the proprietor, who was to a
+ certain extent responsible for his serfs. Thus the serf might live a
+ tranquil, contented life, and die at a ripe old age, without ever having
+ been conscious that serfage was a grievous burden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If all the serfs had lived in this way we might, perhaps, regret that the
+ Emancipation was ever undertaken. In reality there was, as the French say,
+ le revers de la medaille, and serfage generally appeared under a form very
+ different from that which I have just depicted. The proprietors were,
+ unfortunately, not all of the enlightened, humane type. Amongst them were
+ many who demanded from their serfs an inordinate amount of labour, and
+ treated them in a very inhuman fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These oppressors of their serfs may be divided into four categories.
+ First, there were the proprietors who managed their own estates, and
+ oppressed simply for the purpose of increasing their revenues. Secondly,
+ there were a number of retired officers who wished to establish a certain
+ order and discipline on their estates, and who employed for this purpose
+ the barbarous measures which were at that time used in the army, believing
+ that merciless corporal punishment was the only means of curing laziness,
+ disorderliness and other vices. Thirdly, there were the absentees who
+ lived beyond their means, and demanded from their steward, under pain of
+ giving him or his son as a recruit, a much greater yearly sum than the
+ estate could be reasonably expected to yield. Lastly, in the latter years
+ of serfage, there were a number of men who bought estates as a mercantile
+ speculation, and made as much money out of them as they could in the
+ shortest possible space of time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all hard masters, the last-named were the most terrible. Utterly
+ indifferent to the welfare of the serfs and the ultimate fate of the
+ property, they cut down the timber, sold the cattle, exacted heavy money
+ dues under threats of giving the serfs or their children as recruits,
+ presented to the military authorities a number of conscripts greater than
+ was required by law&mdash;selling the conscription receipts (zatchetniya
+ kvitantsii) to the merchants and burghers who were liable to the
+ conscription but did not wish to serve&mdash;compelled some of the richer
+ serfs to buy their liberty at an enormous price, and, in a word, used
+ every means, legal and illegal, for extracting money. By this system of
+ management they ruined the estate completely in the course of a few years;
+ but by that time they had realised probably the whole sum paid, with a
+ very fair profit from the operation; and this profit could be considerably
+ augmented by selling a number of the peasant families for transportation
+ to another estate (na svoz), or by mortgaging the property in the
+ Opekunski Sovet&mdash;a Government institution which lent money on landed
+ property without examining carefully the nature of the security.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the means which the proprietors possessed of oppressing their
+ peasants, we must distinguish between the legal and the actual. The legal
+ were almost as complete as any one could desire. "The proprietor," it is
+ said in the Laws (Vol. IX, p. 1045, ed. an. 1857), "may impose on his
+ serfs every kind of labour, may take from them money dues (obrok) and
+ demand from them personal service, with this one restriction, that they
+ should not be thereby ruined, and that the number of days fixed by law
+ should be left to them for their own work."* Besides this, he had the
+ right to transform peasants into domestic servants, and might, instead of
+ employing them in his own service, hire them out to others who had the
+ rights and privileges of Noblesse (pp. 1047-48). For all offences
+ committed against himself or against any one under his jurisdiction he
+ could subject the guilty ones to corporal punishment not exceeding forty
+ lashes with the birch or fifteen blows with the stick (p. 1052); and if he
+ considered any of his serfs as incorrigible, he could present them to the
+ authorities to be drafted into the army or transported to Siberia as he
+ might desire (pp. 1053-55). In cases of insubordination, where the
+ ordinary domestic means of discipline did not suffice, he could call in
+ the police and the military to support his authority.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * I give here the references to the Code, because Russians
+ commonly believe and assert that the hiring out of serfs,
+ the infliction of corporal punishment, and similar practices
+ were merely abuses unauthorised by law.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Such were the legal means by which the proprietor might oppress his
+ peasants, and it will be readily understood that they were very
+ considerable and very elastic. By law he had the power to impose any dues
+ in labour or money which he might think fit, and in all cases the serfs
+ were ordered to be docile and obedient (p. 1027). Corporal punishment,
+ though restricted by law, he could in reality apply to any extent.
+ Certainly none of the serfs, and very few of the proprietors, were aware
+ that the law placed any restriction on this right. All the proprietors
+ were in the habit of using corporal punishment as they thought proper, and
+ unless a proprietor became notorious for inhuman cruelty the authorities
+ never thought of interfering. But in the eyes of the peasants corporal
+ punishment was not the worst. What they feared infinitely more than the
+ birch or the stick was the proprietor's power of giving them or their sons
+ as recruits. The law assumed that this extreme means would be employed
+ only against those serfs who showed themselves incorrigibly vicious or
+ insubordinate; but the authorities accepted those presented without making
+ any investigations, and consequently the proprietor might use this power
+ as an effective means of extortion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Against these means of extortion and oppression the serfs had no legal
+ protection. The law provided them with no means of resisting any injustice
+ to which they might be subjected, or of bringing to punishment the master
+ who oppressed and ruined them. The Government, notwithstanding its sincere
+ desire to protect them from inordinate burdens and cruel treatment, rarely
+ interfered between the master and his serfs, being afraid of thereby
+ undermining the authority of the proprietors, and awakening among the
+ peasantry a spirit of insubordination. The serfs were left, therefore, to
+ their own resources, and had to defend themselves as best they could. The
+ simplest way was open mutiny; but this was rarely employed, for they knew
+ by experience that any attempt of the kind would be at once put down by
+ the military and mercilessly punished. Much more favourite and efficient
+ methods were passive resistance, flight, and fire-raising or murder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We might naturally suppose that an unscrupulous proprietor, armed with the
+ enormous legal and actual power which I have just described, could very
+ easily extort from his peasants anything he desired. In reality, however,
+ the process of extortion, when it exceeded a certain measure, was a very
+ difficult operation. The Russian peasant has a capacity of patient
+ endurance that would do honour to a martyr, and a power of continued,
+ dogged, passive resistance such as is possessed, I believe, by no other
+ class of men in Europe; and these qualities formed a very powerful barrier
+ against the rapacity of unconscientious proprietors. As soon as the serfs
+ remarked in their master a tendency to rapacity and extortion, they at
+ once took measures to defend themselves. Their first step was to sell
+ secretly the live stock they did not actually require, and all their
+ movable property except the few articles necessary for everyday use; then
+ the little capital realised was carefully hidden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When this had been effected, the proprietor might threaten and punish as
+ he liked, but he rarely succeeded in unearthing the treasure. Many a
+ peasant, under such circumstances, bore patiently the most cruel
+ punishment, and saw his sons taken away as recruits, and yet he persisted
+ in declaring that he had no money to ransom himself and his children. A
+ spectator in such a case would probably have advised him to give up his
+ little store of money, and thereby liberate himself from persecution; but
+ the peasants reasoned otherwise. They were convinced, and not without
+ reason, that the sacrifice of their little capital would merely put off
+ the evil day, and that the persecution would very soon recommence. In this
+ way they would have to suffer as before, and have the additional
+ mortification of feeling that they had spent to no purpose the little that
+ they possessed. Their fatalistic belief in the "perhaps" (avos') came here
+ to their aid. Perhaps the proprietor might become weary of his efforts
+ when he saw that they led to no result, or perhaps something might occur
+ which would remove the persecutor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It always happened, however, that when a proprietor treated his serfs with
+ extreme injustice and cruelty, some of them lost patience, and sought
+ refuge in flight. As the estates lay perfectly open on all sides, and it
+ was utterly impossible to exercise a strict supervision, nothing was
+ easier than to run away, and the fugitive might be a hundred miles off
+ before his absence was noticed. But the oppressed serf was reluctant to
+ adopt such an extreme measure. He had almost always a wife and family, and
+ he could not possibly take them with him; flight, therefore, was
+ expatriation for life in its most terrible form. Besides this, the life of
+ a fugitive was by no means enviable. He was liable at any moment to fall
+ into the hands of the police, and to be put into prison or sent back to
+ his master. So little charm, indeed, did this life present that not
+ infrequently after a few months or a few years the fugitive returned of
+ his own accord to his former domicile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Regarding fugitives or passportless wanderers in general, I may here
+ remark parenthetically that there were two kinds. In the first place,
+ there was the young, able-bodied peasant, who fled from the oppression of
+ his master or from the conscription. Such a fugitive almost always sought
+ out for himself a new domicile&mdash;generally in the southern provinces,
+ where there was a great scarcity of labourers, and where many proprietors
+ habitually welcomed all peasants who presented themselves, without making
+ any inquiries as to passports. In the second place, there were those who
+ chose fugitivism as a permanent mode of life. These were, for the most
+ part, men or women of a certain age&mdash;widowers or widows&mdash;who had
+ no close family ties, and who were too infirm or too lazy to work. The
+ majority of these assumed the character of pilgrims. As such they could
+ always find enough to eat, and could generally even collect a few roubles
+ with which to grease the palm of any zealous police-officer who should
+ arrest them. For a life of this kind Russia presented peculiar facilities.
+ There was abundance of monasteries, where all comers could live for three
+ days without questions being asked, and where those who were willing to do
+ a little work for the patron saint might live for a much longer period.
+ Then there were the towns, where the rich merchants considered almsgiving
+ as very profitable for salvation. And, lastly, there were the villages,
+ where a professing pilgrim was sure to be hospitably received and
+ entertained so long as he refrained from stealing and other acts too
+ grossly inconsistent with his assumed character. For those who contented
+ themselves with simple fare, and did not seek to avoid the usual
+ privations of a wanderer's life, these ordinary means of subsistence were
+ amply sufficient. Those who were more ambitious and more cunning often
+ employed their talents with great success in the world of the Old
+ Ritualists and Sectarians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last and most desperate means of defense which the serfs possessed
+ were fire-raising and murder. With regard to the amount of fire-raising
+ there are no trustworthy statistics. With regard to the number of agrarian
+ murders I once obtained some interesting statistical data, but
+ unfortunately lost them. I may say, however, that these cases were not
+ very numerous. This is to be explained in part by the patient,
+ long-suffering character of the peasantry, and in part by the fact that
+ the great majority of the proprietors were by no means such inhuman
+ taskmasters as is sometimes supposed. When a case did occur, the
+ Administration always made a strict investigation&mdash;punishing the
+ guilty with exemplary severity, and taking no account of the provocation
+ to which they had been subjected. The peasantry, on the contrary&mdash;at
+ least, when the act was not the result of mere personal vengeance&mdash;secretly
+ sympathised with "the unfortunates," and long cherished their memory as
+ that of men who had suffered for the Mir.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In speaking of the serfs I have hitherto confined my attention to the
+ members of the Mir, or rural Commune&mdash;that is to say, the peasants in
+ the narrower sense of the term; but besides these there were the
+ Dvorovuye, or domestic servants, and of these I must add a word or two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Dvorovuye were domestic slaves rather than serfs in the proper sense
+ of the term. Let us, however, avoid wounding unnecessarily Russian
+ sensibilities by the use of the ill-sounding word. We may call the class
+ in question "domestics"&mdash;remembering, of course, that they were not
+ quite domestic servants in the ordinary sense. They received no wages,
+ were not at liberty to change masters, possessed almost no legal rights,
+ and might be punished, hired out, or sold by their owners without any
+ infraction of the written law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These "domestics" were very numerous&mdash;out of all proportion to the
+ work to be performed&mdash;and could consequently lead a very lazy life;*
+ but the peasant considered it a great misfortune to be transferred to
+ their ranks, for he thereby lost his share of the Communal land and the
+ little independence which he enjoyed. It very rarely happened, however,
+ that the proprietor took an able-bodied peasant as domestic. The class
+ generally kept up its numbers by the legitimate and illegitimate method of
+ natural increase; and involuntary additions were occasionally made when
+ orphans were left without near relatives, and no other family wished to
+ adopt them. To this class belonged the lackeys, servant-girls, cooks,
+ coachmen, stable-boys, gardeners, and a large number of nondescript old
+ men and women who had no very clearly defined functions. If the proprietor
+ had a private theatre or orchestra, it was from this class that the actors
+ and musicians were drawn. Those of them who were married and had children
+ occupied a position intermediate between the ordinary domestic servant and
+ the peasant. On the one hand, they received from the master a monthly
+ allowance of food and a yearly allowance of clothes, and they were obliged
+ to live in the immediate vicinity of the mansion-house; but, on the other
+ hand, they had each a separate house or apartment, with a little
+ cabbage-garden, and commonly a small plot of flax. The unmarried ones
+ lived in all respects like ordinary domestic servants.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Those proprietors who kept orchestras, large packs of
+ hounds, &amp;c., had sometimes several hundred domestic serfs.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The number of these domestic serfs being generally out of all proportion
+ to the amount of work they had to perform, they were imbued with a
+ hereditary spirit of indolence, and they performed lazily and carelessly
+ what they had to do. On the other hand, they were often sincerely attached
+ to the family they served, and occasionally proved by acts their fidelity
+ and attachment. Here is an instance out of many for which I can vouch. An
+ old nurse, whose mistress was dangerously ill, vowed that, in the event of
+ the patient's recovery, she would make a pilgrimage, first to Kief, the
+ Holy City on the Dnieper, and afterwards to Solovetsk, a much revered
+ monastery on an island in the White Sea. The patient recovered, and the
+ old woman, in fulfilment of her vow, walked more than two thousand miles!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This class of serfs might well be called domestic slaves, but I must warn
+ the reader that he ought not to use the expression when speaking with
+ Russians, because they are extremely sensitive on the point. Serfage, they
+ say, was something quite different from slavery, and slavery never existed
+ in Russia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first part of this assertion is perfectly true, and the second part
+ perfectly false. In old times, as I have said above, slavery was a
+ recognised institution in Russia as in other countries. One can hardly
+ read a few pages of the old chronicles without stumbling on references to
+ slaves; and I distinctly remember&mdash;though I cannot at this moment
+ give chapter and verse&mdash;that one of the old Russian Princes was so
+ valiant and so successful in his wars that during his reign a slave might
+ be bought for a few coppers. As late as the beginning of last century the
+ domestic serfs were sold very much as domestic slaves used to be sold in
+ countries where slavery was recognised as a legal institution. Here is an
+ example of the customary advertisement; I take it almost at random from
+ the Moscow Gazette of 1801:&mdash;"TO BE SOLD: three coachmen, well
+ trained and handsome; and two girls, the one eighteen, and the other
+ fifteen years of age, both of them good-looking, and well acquainted with
+ various kinds of handiwork. In the same house there are for sale two
+ hairdressers; the one, twenty-one years of age, can read, write, play on a
+ musical instrument, and act as huntsman; the other can dress ladies' and
+ gentlemen's hair. In the same house are sold pianos and organs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little farther on in the same number of the paper, a first-rate clerk, a
+ carver, and a lackey are offered for sale, and the reason assigned is a
+ superabundance of the articles in question (za izlishestvom). In some
+ instances it seems as if the serfs and the cattle were intentionally put
+ in the same category, as in the following announcement: "In this house one
+ can buy a coachman and a Dutch cow about to calve." The style of these
+ advertisements, and the frequent recurrence of the same addresses, show
+ that there was at this time in Moscow a regular class of slave-dealers.
+ The humane Alexander I. prohibited advertisements of this kind, but he did
+ not put down the custom which they represented, and his successor,
+ Nicholas I., took no effective measures for its repression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the whole number of serfs belonging to the proprietors, the domestics
+ formed, according to the census of 1857, no less than 6 3/4 per cent.
+ (6.79), and their numbers were evidently rapidly increasing, for in the
+ preceding census they represented only 4.79 per cent. of the whole. This
+ fact seems all the more significant when we observe that during this
+ period the number of peasant serfs had diminished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I must now bring this long chapter to an end. My aim has been to represent
+ serfage in its normal, ordinary forms rather than in its occasional
+ monstrous manifestations. Of these latter I have a collection containing
+ ample materials for a whole series of sensation novels, but I refrain from
+ quoting them, because I do not believe that the criminal annals of a
+ country give a fair representation of its real condition. On the other
+ hand, I do not wish to whitewash serfage or attenuate its evil
+ consequences. No great body of men could long wield such enormous
+ uncontrolled power without abusing it,* and no large body of men could
+ long live under such power without suffering morally and materially from
+ its pernicious influence. If serfage did not create that moral apathy and
+ intellectual lethargy which formed, as it were, the atmosphere of Russian
+ provincial life, it did much at least to preserve it. In short, serfage
+ was the chief barrier to all material and moral progress, and in a time of
+ moral awakening such as that which I have described in the preceding
+ chapter, the question of Emancipation naturally came at once to the front.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The number of deposed proprietors&mdash;or rather the number of
+ estates placed under curators in consequence of the abuse of
+ authority on the part of their owners&mdash;amounted in 1859 to
+ 215. So at least I found in an official MS. document shown
+ to me by the late Nicholas Milutin.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE EMANCIPATION OF THE SERFS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The Question Raised&mdash;Chief Committee&mdash;The Nobles of the
+ Lithuanian Provinces&mdash;The Tsar's Broad Hint to the Noblesse&mdash;Enthusiasm
+ in the Press&mdash;The Proprietors&mdash;Political Aspirations&mdash;No
+ Opposition&mdash;The Government&mdash;Public Opinion&mdash;Fear of the
+ Proletariat&mdash;The Provincial Committees&mdash;The Elaboration
+ Commission&mdash;The Question Ripens&mdash;Provincial Deputies&mdash;Discontent
+ and Demonstrations&mdash;The Manifesto&mdash;Fundamental Principles of the
+ Law&mdash;Illusions and Disappointment of the Serfs&mdash;Arbiters of the
+ Peace&mdash;A Characteristic Incident&mdash;Redemption&mdash;Who Effected
+ the Emancipation?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a fundamental principle of Russian political organisation that all
+ initiative in public affairs proceeds from the Autocratic Power. The
+ widespread desire, therefore, for the Emancipation of the serfs did not
+ find free expression so long as the Emperor kept silence regarding his
+ intentions. The educated classes watched anxiously for some sign, and soon
+ a sign was given to them. In March, 1856&mdash;a few days after the
+ publication of the manifesto announcing the conclusion of peace with the
+ Western Powers&mdash;his Majesty said to the Marshals of Noblesse in
+ Moscow: "For the removal of certain unfounded reports I consider it
+ necessary to declare to you that I have not at present the intention of
+ annihilating serfage; but certainly, as you yourselves know, the existing
+ manner of possessing serfs cannot remain unchanged. It is better to
+ abolish serfage from above than to await the time when it will begin to
+ abolish itself from below. I request you, gentlemen, to consider how this
+ can be put into execution, and to submit my words to the Noblesse for
+ their consideration."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These words were intended to sound the Noblesse and induce them to make a
+ voluntary proposal, but they had not the desired effect. Abolitionist
+ enthusiasm was rare among the great nobles, and those who really wished to
+ see serfage abolished considered the Imperial utterance too vague and
+ oracular to justify them in taking the initiative. As no further steps
+ were taken for some time, the excitement caused by the incident soon
+ subsided, and many people assumed that the consideration of the problem
+ had been indefinitely postponed. "The Government," it was said, "evidently
+ intended to raise the question, but on perceiving the indifference or
+ hostility of the landed proprietors, it became frightened and drew back."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Emperor was in reality disappointed. He had expected that his
+ "faithful Moscow Noblesse," of which he was wont to say he was himself a
+ member, would at once respond to his call, and that the ancient capital
+ would have the honour of beginning the work. And if the example were thus
+ given by Moscow, he had no doubt that it would soon be followed by the
+ other provinces. He now perceived that the fundamental principles on which
+ the Emancipation should be effected must be laid down by the Government,
+ and for this purpose he created a secret committee composed of several
+ great officers of State.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This "Chief Committee for Peasant Affairs," as it was afterwards called,
+ devoted six months to studying the history of the question. Emancipation
+ schemes were by no means a new phenomenon in Russia. Ever since the time
+ of Catherine II. the Government had thought of improving the condition of
+ the serfs, and on more than one occasion a general emancipation had been
+ contemplated. In this way the question had slowly ripened, and certain
+ fundamental principles had come to be pretty generally recognised. Of
+ these principles the most important was that the State should not consent
+ to any project which would uproot the peasant from the soil and allow him
+ to wander about at will; for such a measure would render the collection of
+ the taxes impossible, and in all probability produce the most frightful
+ agrarian disorders. And to this general principle there was an important
+ corollary: if severe restrictions were to be placed on free migration, it
+ would be necessary to provide the peasantry with land in the immediate
+ vicinity of the villages; otherwise they must inevitably fall back under
+ the power of the proprietors, and a new and worse kind of serfage would
+ thus be created. But in order to give land to the peasantry it would be
+ necessary to take it from the proprietors; and this expropriation seemed
+ to many a most unjustifiable infringement of the sacred rights of
+ property. It was this consideration that had restrained Nicholas from
+ taking any decisive measures with regard to serfage; and it had now
+ considerable weight with the members of the committee, who were nearly all
+ great land-owners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding the strenuous exertions of the Grand Duke Constantine, who
+ had been appointed a member for the express purpose of accelerating the
+ proceedings, the committee did not show as much zeal and energy as was
+ desired, and orders were given to take some decided step. At that moment a
+ convenient opportunity presented itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Lithuanian Provinces, where the nobles were Polish by origin and
+ sympathies, the miserable condition of the peasantry had induced the
+ Government in the preceding reign to limit the arbitrary power of the
+ serf-owners by so-called Inventories, in which the mutual obligations of
+ masters and serfs were regulated and defined. These Inventories had caused
+ great dissatisfaction, and the proprietors now proposed that they should
+ be revised. Of this the Government determined to take advantage. On the
+ somewhat violent assumption that these proprietors wished to emancipate
+ their serfs, an Imperial rescript was prepared approving of their supposed
+ desire, and empowering them to form committees for the preparation of
+ definite projects.* In the rescript itself the word emancipation was
+ studiously avoided, but there could be no doubt as to the implied meaning,
+ for it was expressly stated in the supplementary considerations that "the
+ abolition of serfage must be effected not suddenly, but gradually." Four
+ days later the Minister of the Interior, in accordance with a secret order
+ from the Emperor, sent a circular to the Governors and Marshals of
+ Noblesse all over Russia proper, informing them that the nobles of the
+ Lithuanian Provinces "had recognised the necessity of liberating the
+ peasants," and that "this noble intention" had afforded peculiar
+ satisfaction to his Majesty. A copy of the rescript and the fundamental
+ principles to be observed accompanied the circular, "in case the nobles of
+ other provinces should express a similar desire."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This celebrated document is known as "The Rescript to
+ Nazimof." More than once in the course of conversation I did
+ all in my power, within the limits of politeness and
+ discretion, to extract from General Nazimof a detailed
+ account of this important episode, but my efforts were
+ unsuccessful.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This circular produced an immense sensation throughout the country. No one
+ could for a moment misunderstand the suggestion that the nobles of other
+ provinces MIGHT POSSIBLY express a desire to liberate their serfs. Such
+ vague words, when spoken by an autocrat, have a very definite and
+ unmistakable meaning, which prudent loyal subjects have no difficulty in
+ understanding. If any doubted, their doubts were soon dispelled, for the
+ Emperor, a few weeks later, publicly expressed a hope that, with the help
+ of God and the co-operation of the nobles, the work would be successfully
+ accomplished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The die was cast, and the Government looked anxiously to see the result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The periodical Press&mdash;which was at once the product and the fomenter
+ of the liberal aspirations&mdash;hailed the raising of the question with
+ boundless enthusiasm. The Emancipation, it was said, would certainly open
+ a new and glorious epoch in the national history. Serfage was described as
+ an ulcer that had long been poisoning the national blood; as an enormous
+ weight under which the whole nation groaned; as an insurmountable
+ obstacle, preventing all material and moral progress; as a cumbrous load
+ which rendered all free, vigorous action impossible, and prevented Russia
+ from rising to the level of the Western nations. If Russia had succeeded
+ in stemming the flood of adverse fortune in spite of this millstone round
+ her neck, what might she not accomplish when free and untrammelled? All
+ sections of the literary world had arguments to offer in support of the
+ foregone conclusion. The moralists declared that all the prevailing vices
+ were the product of serfage, and that moral progress was impossible in an
+ atmosphere of slavery; the lawyers held that the arbitrary authority of
+ the proprietors over the peasants had no legal basis; the economists
+ explained that free labour was an indispensable condition of industrial
+ and commercial prosperity; the philosophical historians showed that the
+ normal historical development of the country demanded the immediate
+ abolition of this superannuated remnant of barbarism; and the writers of
+ the sentimental, gushing type poured forth endless effusions about
+ brotherly love to the weak and the oppressed. In a word, the Press was for
+ the moment unanimous, and displayed a feverish excitement which demanded a
+ liberal use of superlatives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This enthusiastic tone accorded perfectly with the feelings of a large
+ section of the nobles. Nearly the whole of the Noblesse was more or less
+ affected by the newborn enthusiasm for everything just, humanitarian, and
+ liberal. The aspirations found, of course, their most ardent
+ representatives among the educated youth; but they were by no means
+ confined to the younger men, who had passed through the universities and
+ had always regarded serfage as a stain on the national honour. Many a Saul
+ was found among the prophets. Many an old man, with grey hairs and
+ grandchildren, who had all his life placidly enjoyed the fruits of serf
+ labour, was now heard to speak of serfage as an antiquated institution
+ which could not be reconciled with modern humanitarian ideas; and not a
+ few of all ages, who had formerly never thought of reading books or
+ newspapers, now perused assiduously the periodical literature, and picked
+ up the liberal and humanitarian phrases with which it was filled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Abolitionist fervour was considerably augmented by certain political
+ aspirations which did not appear in the newspapers, but which were at that
+ time very generally entertained. In spite of the Press-censure a large
+ section of the educated classes had become acquainted with the political
+ literature of France and Germany, and had imbibed therefrom an unbounded
+ admiration for Constitutional government. A Constitution, it was thought,
+ would necessarily remove all political evils and create something like a
+ political Millennium. And it was not to be a Constitution of the ordinary
+ sort&mdash;the fruit of compromise between hostile political parties&mdash;but
+ an institution designed calmly according to the latest results of
+ political science, and so constructed that all classes would voluntarily
+ contribute to the general welfare. The necessary prelude to this happy era
+ of political liberty was, of course, the abolition of serfage. When the
+ nobles had given up their power over their serfs they would receive a
+ Constitution as an indemnification and reward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were, however, many nobles of the old school who remained impervious
+ to all these new feelings and ideas. On them the raising of the
+ Emancipation question had a very different effect. They had no source of
+ revenue but their estates, and they could not conceive the possibility of
+ working their estates without serf labour. If the peasant was indolent and
+ careless even under strict supervision, what would he become when no
+ longer under the authority of a master? If the profits from farming were
+ already small, what would they be when no one would work without wages?
+ And this was not the worst, for it was quite evident from the circular
+ that the land question was to be raised, and that a considerable portion
+ of each estate would be transferred, at least for a time, to the
+ emancipated peasants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the proprietors who looked at the question in this way the prospect of
+ Emancipation was certainly not at all agreeable, but we must not imagine
+ that they felt as English land-owners would feel if threatened by a
+ similar danger. In England a hereditary estate has for the family a value
+ far beyond what it would bring in the market. It is regarded as one and
+ indivisible, and any dismemberment of it would be looked upon as a grave
+ family misfortune. In Russia, on the contrary, estates have nothing of
+ this semi-sacred character, and may be at any time dismembered without
+ outraging family feeling or traditional associations. Indeed, it is not
+ uncommon that when a proprietor dies, leaving only one estate and several
+ children, the property is broken up into fractions and divided among the
+ heirs. Even the prospect of pecuniary sacrifice did not alarm the Russians
+ so much as it would alarm Englishmen. Men who keep no accounts and take
+ little thought for the morrow are much less averse to making pecuniary
+ sacrifices&mdash;whether for a wise or a foolish purpose&mdash;than those
+ who carefully arrange their mode of life according to their income.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, after due allowance has been made for these peculiarities, it must
+ be admitted that the feeling of dissatisfaction and alarm was very
+ widespread. Even Russians do not like the prospect of losing a part of
+ their land and income. No protest, however, was entered, and no opposition
+ was made. Those who were hostile to the measure were ashamed to show
+ themselves selfish and unpatriotic. At the same time they knew very well
+ that the Emperor, if he wished, could effect the Emancipation in spite of
+ them, and that resistance on their part would draw down upon them the
+ Imperial displeasure, without affording any compensating advantage. They
+ knew, too, that there was a danger from below, so that any useless show of
+ opposition would be like playing with matches in a powder-magazine. The
+ serfs would soon hear that the Tsar desired to set them free, and they
+ might, if they suspected that the proprietors were trying to frustrate the
+ Tsar's benevolent intentions, use violent measures to get rid of the
+ opposition. The idea of agrarian massacres had already taken possession of
+ many timid minds. Besides this, all classes of the proprietors felt that
+ if the work was to be done, it should be done by the Noblesse and not by
+ the bureaucracy. If it were effected by the nobles the interests of the
+ land-owners would be duly considered, but if it were effected by the
+ Administration without their concurrence and co-operation their interests
+ would be neglected, and there would inevitably be an enormous amount of
+ jobbery and corruption. In accordance with this view, the Noblesse
+ corporations of the various provinces successively requested permission to
+ form committees for the consideration of the question, and during the year
+ 1858 a committee was opened in almost every province in which serfage
+ existed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this way the question was apparently handed over for solution to the
+ nobles, but in reality the Noblesse was called upon merely to advise, and
+ not to legislate. The Government had not only laid down the fundamental
+ principles of the scheme; it continually supervised the work of
+ construction, and it reserved to itself the right of modifying or
+ rejecting the projects proposed by the committees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to these fundamental principles the serfs should be emancipated
+ gradually, so that for some time they would remain attached to the glebe
+ and subject to the authority of the proprietors. During this transition
+ period they should redeem by money payments or labour their houses and
+ gardens, and enjoy in usufruct a certain quantity of land, sufficient to
+ enable them to support themselves and to fulfil their obligations to the
+ State as well as to the proprietor. In return for this land they should
+ pay a yearly rent in money, produce or labour over and above the yearly
+ sum paid for the redemption of their houses and gardens. As to what should
+ be done after the expiry of the transition period, the Government seems to
+ have had no clearly conceived intentions. Probably it hoped that by that
+ time the proprietors and their emancipated serfs would have invented some
+ convenient modus vivendi, and that nothing but a little legislative
+ regulation would be necessary. But radical legislation is like the
+ letting-out of water. These fundamental principles, adopted at first with
+ a view to mere immediate practical necessity, soon acquired a very
+ different significance. To understand this we must return to the
+ periodical literature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Until the serf question came to be discussed, the reform aspirations were
+ very vague, and consequently there was a remarkable unanimity among their
+ representatives. The great majority of the educated classes were
+ unanimously of opinion that Russia should at once adopt from the West all
+ those liberal principles and institutions the exclusion of which had
+ prevented the country from rising to the level of the Western nations. But
+ very soon symptoms of a schism became apparent. Whilst the literature in
+ general was still preaching the doctrine that Russia should adopt
+ everything that was "liberal," a few voices began to be heard warning the
+ unwary that much which bore the name of liberal was in reality already
+ antiquated and worthless&mdash;that Russia ought not to follow blindly in
+ the footsteps of other nations, but ought rather to profit by their
+ experience, and avoid the errors into which they had fallen. The chief of
+ these errors was, according to these new teachers, the abnormal
+ development of individualism&mdash;the adoption of that principle of
+ laissez faire which forms the basis of what may be called the Orthodox
+ School of Political Economists. Individualism and unrestricted
+ competition, it was said, have now reached in the West an abnormal and
+ monstrous development. Supported by the laissez faire principle, they have
+ led&mdash;and must always lead&mdash;to the oppression of the weak, the
+ tyranny of capital, the impoverishment of the masses for the benefit of
+ the few, and the formation of a hungry, dangerous Proletariat! This has
+ already been recognised by the most advanced thinkers of France and
+ Germany. If the older countries cannot at once cure those evils, that is
+ no reason for Russia to inoculate herself with them. She is still at the
+ commencement of her career, and it would be folly for her to wander
+ voluntarily for ages in the Desert, when a direct route to the Promised
+ Land has been already discovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to convey some idea of the influence which this teaching
+ exercised, I must here recall, at the risk of repeating myself, what I
+ said in a former chapter. The Russians, as I have there pointed out, have
+ a peculiar way of treating political and social questions. Having received
+ their political education from books, they naturally attribute to
+ theoretical considerations an importance which seems to us exaggerated.
+ When any important or trivial question arises, they at once launch into a
+ sea of philosophical principles, and pay less attention to the little
+ objects close at hand than to the big ones that appear on the distant
+ horizon of the future. And when they set to work at any political reform
+ they begin ab ovo. As they have no traditional prejudices to fetter them,
+ and no traditional principles to lead them, they naturally take for their
+ guidance the latest conclusions of political philosophy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bearing this in mind, let us see how it affected the Emancipation
+ question. The Proletariat&mdash;described as a dangerous monster which was
+ about to swallow up society in Western Europe, and which might at any
+ moment cross the frontier unless kept out by vigorous measures&mdash;took
+ possession of the popular imagination, and aroused the fears of the
+ reading public. To many it seemed that the best means of preventing the
+ formation of a Proletariat in Russia was the securing of land for the
+ emancipated serfs and the careful preservation of the rural Commune. "Now
+ is the moment," it was said, "for deciding the important question whether
+ Russia is to fall a prey, like the Western nations, to this terrible evil,
+ or whether she is to protect herself for ever against it. In the decision
+ of this question lies the future destiny of the country. If the peasants
+ be emancipated without land, or if those Communal institutions which give
+ to every man a share of the soil and secure this inestimable boon for the
+ generations still unborn be now abolished, a Proletariat will be rapidly
+ formed, and the peasantry will become a disorganised mass of homeless
+ wanderers like the English agricultural labourers. If, on the contrary, a
+ fair share of land be granted to them, and if the Commune be made
+ proprietor of the land ceded, the danger of a Proletariat is for ever
+ removed, and Russia will thereby set an example to the civilised world!
+ Never has a nation had such an opportunity of making an enormous leap
+ forward on the road of progress, and never again will the opportunity
+ occur. The Western nations have discovered their error when it is too late&mdash;when
+ the peasantry have been already deprived of their land, and the labouring
+ classes of the towns have already fallen a prey to the insatiable cupidity
+ of the capitalists. In vain their most eminent thinkers warn and exhort.
+ Ordinary remedies are no longer of any avail. But Russia may avoid these
+ dangers, if she but act wisely and prudently in this great matter. The
+ peasants are still in actual, if not legal, possession of the land, and
+ there is as yet no Proletariat in the towns. All that is necessary,
+ therefore, is to abolish the arbitrary authority of the proprietors
+ without expropriating the peasants, and without disturbing the existing
+ Communal institutions, which form the best barrier against pauperism."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These ideas were warmly espoused by many proprietors, and exercised a very
+ great influence on the deliberations of the Provincial Committees. In
+ these committees there were generally two groups. The majorities, whilst
+ making large concessions to the claims of justice and expediency,
+ endeavoured to defend, as far as possible, the interests of their class;
+ the minorities, though by no means indifferent to the interests of the
+ class to which they belonged, allowed the more abstract theoretical
+ considerations to be predominant. At first the majorities did all in their
+ power to evade the fundamental principles laid down by the Government as
+ much too favourable to the peasantry; but when they perceived that public
+ opinion, as represented by the Press, went much further than the
+ Government, they clung to these fundamental principles&mdash;which secured
+ at least the fee simple of the estate to the landlord&mdash;as their
+ anchor of safety. Between the two parties arose naturally a strong spirit
+ of hostility, and the Government, which wished to have the support of the
+ minorities, found it advisable that both should present their projects for
+ consideration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the Provincial Committees worked independently, there was considerable
+ diversity in the conclusions at which they arrived. The task of codifying
+ these conclusions, and elaborating out of them a general scheme of
+ Emancipation, was entrusted to a special Imperial Commission, composed
+ partly of officials and partly of landed proprietors named by the
+ Emperor.* Those who believed that the question had really been handed over
+ to the Noblesse assumed that this Commission would merely arrange the
+ materials presented by the Provincial Committees, and that the
+ Emancipation Law would thereafter be elaborated by a National Assembly of
+ deputies elected by the nobles. In reality the Commission, working in St.
+ Petersburg under the direct guidance and control of the Government,
+ fulfilled a very different and much more important function. Using the
+ combined projects merely as a storehouse from which it could draw the
+ proposals it desired, it formed a new project of its own, which ultimately
+ received, after undergoing modification in detail, the Imperial assent.
+ Instead of being a mere chancellerie, as many expected, it became in a
+ certain sense the author of the Emancipation Law.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Known as the Redaktsionnaya Komissiya, or Elaboration
+ Commission. Strictly speaking, there were two, but they are
+ commonly spoken of as one.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There was, as we have seen, in nearly all the Provincial Committees a
+ majority and a minority, the former of which strove to defend the
+ interests of the proprietors, whilst the latter paid more attention to
+ theoretical considerations, and endeavoured to secure for the peasantry a
+ large amount of land and Communal self-government. In the Commission there
+ were the same two parties, but their relative strength was very different.
+ Here the men of theory, instead of forming a minority, were more numerous
+ than their opponents, and enjoyed the support of the Government, which
+ regulated the proceedings. In its instructions we see how much the
+ question had ripened under the influence of the theoretical
+ considerations. There is no longer any trace of the idea that the
+ Emancipation should be gradual; on the contrary, it is expressly declared
+ that the immediate effect of the law should be the complete abolition of
+ the proprietor's authority. There is even evidence of a clear intention of
+ preventing the proprietor as far as possible from exercising any influence
+ over his former serfs. The sharp distinction between the land occupied by
+ the village and the arable land to be ceded in usufruct likewise
+ disappears, and it is merely said that efforts should be made to enable
+ the peasants to become proprietors of the land they required.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The aim of the Government had thus become clear and well defined. The task
+ to be performed was to transform the serfs at once, and with the least
+ possible disturbance of the existing economic conditions, into a class of
+ small Communal proprietors&mdash;that is to say, a class of free peasants
+ possessing a house and garden and a share of the Communal land. To effect
+ this it was merely necessary to declare the serf personally free, to draw
+ a clear line of demarcation between the Communal land and the rest of the
+ estate, and to determine the price or rent which should be paid for this
+ Communal property, inclusive of the land on which the village was built.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The law was prepared in strict accordance with these principles. As to the
+ amount of land to be ceded, it was decided that the existing arrangements,
+ founded on experience, should, as a general rule, be preserved&mdash;in
+ other words, the land actually enjoyed by the peasants should be retained
+ by them; and in order to prevent extreme cases of injustice, a maximum and
+ a minimum were fixed for each district. In like manner, as to the dues, it
+ was decided that the existing arrangements should be taken as the basis of
+ the calculation, but that the sum should be modified according to the
+ amount of land ceded. At the same time facilities were to be given for the
+ transforming of the labour dues into yearly money payments, and for
+ enabling the peasants to redeem them, with the assistance of the
+ Government, in the form of credit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This idea of redemption created, at first, a feeling of alarm among the
+ proprietors. It was bad enough to be obliged to cede a large part of the
+ estates in usufruct, but it seemed to be much worse to have to sell it.
+ Redemption appeared to be a species of wholesale confiscation. But very
+ soon it became evident that the redeeming of the land was profitable for
+ both parties. Cession in perpetual usufruct was felt to be in reality
+ tantamount to alienation of the land, whilst the immediate redemption
+ would enable the proprietors, who had generally little or no ready money
+ to pay their debts, to clear their estates from mortgages, and to make the
+ outlays necessary for the transition to free labour. The majority of the
+ proprietors, therefore, said openly: "Let the Government give us a
+ suitable compensation in money for the land that is taken from us, so that
+ we may be at once freed from all further trouble and annoyance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it became known that the Commission was not merely arranging and
+ codifying the materials, but elaborating a law of its own and regularly
+ submitting its decisions for Imperial confirmation, a feeling of
+ dissatisfaction appeared all over the country. The nobles perceived that
+ the question was being taken out of their hands, and was being solved by a
+ small body composed of bureaucrats and nominees of the Government. After
+ having made a voluntary sacrifice of their rights, they were being
+ unceremoniously pushed aside. They had still, however, the means of
+ correcting this. The Emperor had publicly promised that before the project
+ should become law deputies from the Provincial Committees should be
+ summoned to St. Petersburg to make objections and propose amendments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Commission and the Government would have willingly dispensed with all
+ further advice from the nobles, but it was necessary to redeem the
+ Imperial promise. Deputies were therefore summoned to the capital, but
+ they were not allowed to form, as they hoped, a public assembly for the
+ discussion of the question. All their efforts to hold meetings were
+ frustrated, and they were required merely to answer in writing a list of
+ printed questions regarding matters of detail. The fundamental principles,
+ they were told, had already received the Imperial sanction, and were
+ consequently removed from discussion. Those who desired to discuss details
+ were invited individually to attend meetings of the Commission, where they
+ found one or two members ready to engage with them in a little dialectical
+ fencing. This, of course, did not give much satisfaction. Indeed, the
+ ironical tone in which the fencing was too often conducted served to
+ increase the existing irritation. It was only too evident that the
+ Commission had triumphed, and some of the members could justly boast that
+ they had drowned the deputies in ink and buried them under reams of paper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Believing, or at least professing to believe, that the Emperor was being
+ deceived in this matter by the Administration, several groups of deputies
+ presented petitions to his Majesty containing a respectful protest against
+ the manner in which they had been treated. But by this act they simply
+ laid themselves open to "the most unkindest cut of all." Those who had
+ signed the petitions received a formal reprimand through the police.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This treatment of the deputies, and, above all, this gratuitous insult,
+ produced among the nobles a storm of indignation. They felt that they had
+ been entrapped. The Government had artfully induced them to form projects
+ for the emancipation of their serfs, and now, after having been used as a
+ cat's-paw in the work of their own spoliation, they were being
+ unceremoniously pushed aside as no longer necessary. Those who had
+ indulged in the hope of gaining political rights felt the blow most
+ keenly. A first gentle and respectful attempt at remonstrance had been
+ answered by a dictatorial reprimand through the police! Instead of being
+ called to take an active part in home and foreign politics, they were
+ being treated as naughty schoolboys. In view of this insult all
+ differences of opinion were for the moment forgotten, and all parties
+ resolved to join in a vigorous protest against the insolence and arbitrary
+ conduct of the bureaucracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A convenient opportunity of making this protest in a legal way was offered
+ by the triennial Provincial Assemblies of the Noblesse about to be held in
+ several provinces. So at least it was thought, but here again the Noblesse
+ was checkmated by the Administration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the opening of the Assemblies a circular was issued excluding the
+ Emancipation question from their deliberations. Some Assemblies evaded
+ this order, and succeeded in making a little demonstration by submitting
+ to his Majesty that the time had arrived for other reforms, such as the
+ separation of the administrative and judicial powers, and the creation of
+ local self-government, public judicial procedure, and trial by jury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these reforms were voluntarily effected by the Emperor a few years
+ later, but the manner in which they were suggested seemed to savour of
+ insubordination, and was a flagrant infraction of the principle that all
+ initiative in public affairs should proceed from the central Government.
+ New measures of repression were accordingly used. Some Marshals of
+ Noblesse were reprimanded and others deposed. Of the conspicuous leaders,
+ two were exiled to distant provinces and others placed under the
+ supervision of the police. Worst of all, the whole agitation strengthened
+ the Commission by convincing the Emperor that the majority of the nobles
+ were hostile to his benevolent plans.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This was a misinterpretation of the facts. Very many of
+ those who joined in the protest sincerely sympathised with
+ the idea of Emancipation, and were ready to be even more
+ "liberal" than the Government.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When the Commission had finished its labours, its proposals passed to the
+ two higher instances&mdash;the Committee for Peasant Affairs and the
+ Council of State&mdash;and in both of these the Emperor declared plainly
+ that he could allow no fundamental changes. From all the members he
+ demanded a complete forgetfulness of former differences and a
+ conscientious execution of his orders; "For you must remember," he
+ significantly added, "that in Russia laws are made by the Autocratic
+ Power." From an historical review of the question he drew the conclusion
+ that "the Autocratic Power created serfage, and the Autocratic Power ought
+ to abolish it." On March 3d (February 19th, old style), 1861, the law was
+ signed, and by that act more than twenty millions of serfs were
+ liberated.* A Manifesto containing the fundamental principles of the law
+ was at once sent all over the country, and an order was given that it
+ should be read in all the churches.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * It is sometimes said that forty millions of serfs have
+ been emancipated. The statement is true, if we regard the
+ State peasants as serfs. They held, as I have already
+ explained, an intermediate position between serfage and
+ freedom. The peculiar administration under which they lived
+ was partly abolished by Imperial Orders of September 7th,
+ 1859, and October 23d, 1861. In 1866 they were placed, as
+ regards administration, on a level with the emancipated
+ serfs of the proprietors. As a general rule, they received
+ rather more land and had to pay somewhat lighter dues than
+ the emancipated serfs in the narrower sense of the term.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The three fundamental principles laid down by the law were:&mdash;1. That
+ the serfs should at once receive the civil rights of the free rural
+ classes, and that the authority of the proprietor should be replaced by
+ Communal self-government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. That the rural Communes should as far as possible retain the land they
+ actually held, and should in return pay to the proprietor certain yearly
+ dues in money or labour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. That the Government should by means of credit assist the Communes to
+ redeem these dues, or, in other words, to purchase the lands ceded to them
+ in usufruct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the domestic serfs, it was enacted that they should
+ continue to serve their masters during two years, and that thereafter they
+ should be completely free, but they should have no claim to a share of the
+ land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It might be reasonably supposed that the serfs received with boundless
+ gratitude and delight the Manifesto proclaiming these principles. Here at
+ last was the realisation of their long-cherished hopes. Liberty was
+ accorded to them; and not only liberty, but a goodly portion of the soil&mdash;about
+ half of all the arable land possessed by the proprietors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In reality the Manifesto created among the peasantry a feeling of
+ disappointment rather than delight. To understand this strange fact we
+ must endeavour to place ourselves at the peasant's point of view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first place it must be remarked that all vague, rhetorical phrases
+ about free labour, human dignity, national progress, and the like, which
+ may readily produce among educated men a certain amount of temporary
+ enthusiasm, fall on the ears of the Russian peasant like drops of rain on
+ a granite rock. The fashionable rhetoric of philosophical liberalism is as
+ incomprehensible to him as the flowery circumlocutionary style of an
+ Oriental scribe would be to a keen city merchant. The idea of liberty in
+ the abstract and the mention of rights which lie beyond the sphere of his
+ ordinary everyday life awaken no enthusiasm in his breast. And for mere
+ names he has a profound indifference. What matters it to him that he is
+ officially called, not a "serf," but a "free village-inhabitant," if the
+ change in official terminology is not accompanied by some immediate
+ material advantage? What he wants is a house to live in, food to eat, and
+ raiment wherewithal to be clothed, and to gain these first necessaries of
+ life with as little labour as possible. He looked at the question
+ exclusively from two points of view&mdash;that of historical right and
+ that of material advantage; and from both of these the Emancipation Law
+ seemed to him very unsatisfactory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the subject of historical right the peasantry had their own traditional
+ conceptions, which were completely at variance with the written law.
+ According to the positive legislation the Communal land formed part of the
+ estate, and consequently belonged to the proprietor; but according to the
+ conceptions of the peasantry it belonged to the Commune, and the right of
+ the proprietor consisted merely in that personal authority over the serfs
+ which had been conferred on him by the Tsar. The peasants could not, of
+ course, put these conceptions into a strict legal form, but they often
+ expressed them in their own homely laconic way by saying to their master,
+ "Mui vashi no zemlya nasha"&mdash;that is to say. "We are yours, but the
+ land is ours." And it must be admitted that this view, though legally
+ untenable, had a certain historical justification.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * See preceding chapter.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In olden times the Noblesse had held their land by feudal tenure, and were
+ liable to be ejected as soon as they did not fulfil their obligations to
+ the State. These obligations had been long since abolished, and the feudal
+ tenure transformed into an unconditional right of property, but the
+ peasants clung to the old ideas in a way that strikingly illustrates the
+ vitality of deep-rooted popular conceptions. In their minds the
+ proprietors were merely temporary occupants, who were allowed by the Tsar
+ to exact labour and dues from the serfs. What, then, was Emancipation?
+ Certainly the abolition of all obligatory labour and money dues, and
+ perhaps the complete ejectment of the proprietors. On this latter point
+ there was a difference of opinion. All assumed, as a matter of course,
+ that the Communal land would remain the property of the Commune, but it
+ was not so clear what would be done with the rest of the estate. Some
+ thought that it would be retained by the proprietor, but very many
+ believed that all the land would be given to the Communes. In this way the
+ Emancipation would be in accordance with historical right and with the
+ material advantage of the peasantry, for whose exclusive benefit, it was
+ assumed, the reform had been undertaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of this the peasants found that they were still to pay dues, even
+ for the Communal land which they regarded as unquestionably their own. So
+ at least said the expounders of the law. But the thing was incredible.
+ Either the proprietors must be concealing or misinterpreting the law, or
+ this was merely a preparatory measure, which would be followed by the real
+ Emancipation. Thus were awakened among the peasantry a spirit of mistrust
+ and suspicion and a widespread belief that there would be a second
+ Imperial Manifesto, by which all the land would be divided and all the
+ dues abolished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the nobles the Manifesto made a very different impression. The fact
+ that they were to be entrusted with the putting of the law into execution,
+ and the flattering allusions made to the spirit of generous self-sacrifice
+ which they had exhibited, kindled amongst them enthusiasm enough to make
+ them forget for a time their just grievances and their hostility towards
+ the bureaucracy. They found that the conditions on which the Emancipation
+ was effected were by no means so ruinous as they had anticipated; and the
+ Emperor's appeal to their generosity and patriotism made many of them
+ throw themselves with ardour into the important task confided to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately they could not at once begin the work. The law had been so
+ hurried through the last stages that the preparations for putting it into
+ execution were by no means complete when the Manifesto was published. The
+ task of regulating the future relations between the proprietors and the
+ peasantry was entrusted to local proprietors in each district, who were to
+ be called Arbiters of the Peace (Mirovuiye Posredniki); but three months
+ elapsed before these Arbiters could be appointed. During that time there
+ was no one to explain the law to the peasants and settle the disputes
+ between them and the proprietors; and the consequence of this was that
+ many cases of insubordination and disorder occurred. The muzhik naturally
+ imagined that, as soon as the Tsar said he was free, he was no longer
+ obliged to work for his old master&mdash;that all obligatory labour ceased
+ as soon as the Manifesto was read. In vain the proprietor endeavoured to
+ convince him that, in regard to labour, the old relations must continue,
+ as the law enjoined, until a new arrangement had been made. To all
+ explanations and exhortations he turned a deaf ear, and to the efforts of
+ the rural police he too often opposed a dogged, passive resistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In many cases the simple appearance of the higher authorities sufficed to
+ restore order, for the presence of one of the Tsar's servants convinced
+ many that the order to work for the present as formerly was not a mere
+ invention of the proprietors. But not infrequently the birch had to be
+ applied. Indeed, I am inclined to believe, from the numerous descriptions
+ of this time which I received from eye-witnesses, that rarely, if ever,
+ had the serfs seen and experienced so much flogging as during these first
+ three months after their liberation. Sometimes even the troops had to be
+ called out, and on three occasions they fired on the peasants with ball
+ cartridge. In the most serious case, where a young peasant had set up for
+ a prophet and declared that the Emancipation Law was a forgery, fifty-one
+ peasants were killed and seventy-seven were more or less seriously
+ wounded. In spite of these lamentable incidents, there was nothing which
+ even the most violent alarmist could dignify with the name of an
+ insurrection. Nowhere was there anything that could be called organised
+ resistance. Even in the case above alluded to, the three thousand peasants
+ on whom the troops fired were entirely unarmed, made no attempt to resist,
+ and dispersed in the utmost haste as soon as they discovered that they
+ were being shot down. Had the military authorities shown a little more
+ judgment, tact, and patience, the history of the Emancipation would not
+ have been stained even with those three solitary cases of unnecessary
+ bloodshed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This interregnum between the eras of serfage and liberty was brought to an
+ end by the appointment of the Arbiters of the Peace. Their first duty was
+ to explain the law, and to organise the new peasant self-government. The
+ lowest instance, or primary organ of this self-government, the rural
+ Commune, already existed, and at once recovered much of its ancient
+ vitality as soon as the authority and interference of the proprietors were
+ removed. The second instance, the Volost&mdash;a territorial
+ administrative unit comprising several contiguous Communes&mdash;had to be
+ created, for nothing of the kind had previously existed on the estates of
+ the nobles. It had existed, however, for nearly a quarter of a century
+ among the peasants of the Domains, and it was therefore necessary merely
+ to copy an existing model.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as all the Volosts in his district had been thus organised the
+ Arbiter had to undertake the much more arduous task of regulating the
+ agrarian relations between the proprietors and the Communes&mdash;with the
+ individual peasants, be it remembered, the proprietors had no direct
+ relations whatever. It had been enacted by the law that the future
+ agrarian relations between the two parties should be left, as far as
+ possible, to voluntary contract; and accordingly each proprietor was
+ invited to come to an agreement with the Commune or Communes on his
+ estate. On the ground of this agreement a statute-charter (ustavnaya
+ gramota) was prepared, specifying the number of male serfs, the quantity
+ of land actually enjoyed by them, any proposed changes in this amount, the
+ dues proposed to be levied, and other details. If the Arbiter found that
+ the conditions were in accordance with the law and clearly understood by
+ the peasants, he confirmed the charter, and the arrangement was complete.
+ When the two parties could not come to an agreement within a year, he
+ prepared a charter according to his own judgment, and presented it for
+ confirmation to the higher authorities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dissolution of partnership, if it be allowable to use such a term,
+ between the proprietor and his serfs was sometimes very easy and sometimes
+ very difficult. On many estates the charter did little more than legalise
+ the existing arrangements, but in many instances it was necessary to add
+ to, or subtract from, the amount of Communal land, and sometimes it was
+ even necessary to remove the village to another part of the estate. In all
+ cases there were, of course, conflicting interests and complicated
+ questions, so that the Arbiter had always abundance of difficult work.
+ Besides this, he had to act as mediator in those differences which
+ naturally arose during the transition period, when the authority of the
+ proprietor had been abolished but the separation of the two classes had
+ not yet been effected. The unlimited patriarchal authority which had been
+ formerly wielded by the proprietor or his steward now passed with certain
+ restriction into the hands of the Arbiter, and these peacemakers had to
+ spend a great part of their time in driving about from one estate to
+ another to put an end to alleged cases of insubordination&mdash;some of
+ which, it must be admitted, existed only in the imagination of the
+ proprietors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first the work of amicable settlement proceeded slowly. The proprietors
+ generally showed a conciliatory spirit, and some of them generously
+ proposed conditions much more favourable to the peasants than the law
+ demanded; but the peasants were filled with vague suspicions, and feared
+ to commit themselves by "putting pen to paper." Even the highly respected
+ proprietors, who imagined that they possessed the unbounded confidence of
+ the peasantry, were suspected like the others, and their generous offers
+ were regarded as well-baited traps. Often I have heard old men, sometimes
+ with tears in their eyes, describe the distrust and ingratitude of the
+ muzhik at this time. Many peasants still believed that the proprietors
+ were hiding the real Emancipation Law, and imaginative or ill-intentioned
+ persons fostered this belief by professing to know what the real law
+ contained. The most absurd rumours were afloat, and whole villages
+ sometimes acted upon them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the province of Moscow, for instance, one Commune sent a deputation to
+ the proprietor to inform him that, as he had always been a good master,
+ the Mir would allow him to retain his house and garden during his
+ lifetime. In another locality it was rumoured that the Tsar sat daily on a
+ golden throne in the Crimea, receiving all peasants who came to him, and
+ giving them as much land as they desired; and in order to take advantage
+ of the Imperial liberality a large body of peasants set out for the place
+ indicated, and had to be stopped by the military.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As an illustration of the illusions in which the peasantry indulged at
+ this time, I may mention here one of the many characteristic incidents
+ related to me by gentlemen who had served as Arbiters of the Peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the province of Riazan there was one Commune which had acquired a
+ certain local notoriety for the obstinacy with which it refused all
+ arrangements with the proprietor. My informant, who was Arbiter for the
+ locality, was at last obliged to make a statute-charter for it without its
+ consent. He wished, however, that the peasants should voluntarily accept
+ the arrangement he proposed, and accordingly called them together to talk
+ with them on the subject. After explaining fully the part of the law which
+ related to their case, he asked them what objection they had to make a
+ fair contract with their old master. For some time he received no answer,
+ but gradually by questioning individuals he discovered the cause of their
+ obstinacy: they were firmly convinced that not only the Communal land, but
+ also the rest of the estate, belonged to them. To eradicate this false
+ idea he set himself to reason with them, and the following characteristic
+ dialogue ensued:&mdash;Arbiter: "If the Tsar gave all the land to the
+ peasantry, what compensation could he give to the proprietors to whom the
+ land belongs?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peasant: "The Tsar will give them salaries according to their service."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arbiter: "In order to pay these salaries he would require a great deal
+ more money. Where could he get that money? He would have to increase the
+ taxes, and in that way you would have to pay all the same."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peasant: "The Tsar can make as much money as he likes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arbiter: "If the Tsar can make as much money as he likes, why does he make
+ you pay the poll-tax every year?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peasant: "It is not the Tsar that receives the taxes we pay."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arbiter: "Who, then, receives them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peasant (after a little hesitation, and with a knowing smite): "The
+ officials, of course!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gradually, through the efforts of the Arbiters, the peasants came to know
+ better their real position, and the work began to advance more rapidly.
+ But soon it was checked by another influence. By the end of the first year
+ the "liberal," patriotic enthusiasm of the nobles had cooled. The
+ sentimental, idyllic tendencies had melted away at the first touch of
+ reality, and those who had imagined that liberty would have an immediately
+ salutary effect on the moral character of the serfs confessed themselves
+ disappointed. Many complained that the peasants showed themselves greedy
+ and obstinate, stole wood from the forest, allowed their cattle to wander
+ on the proprietor's fields, failed to fulfil their legal obligations, and
+ broke their voluntary engagements. At the same time the fears of an
+ agrarian rising subsided, so that even the timid were tranquillised. From
+ these causes the conciliatory spirit of the proprietors decreased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The work of conciliating and regulating became consequently more
+ difficult, but the great majority of the Arbiters showed themselves equal
+ to the task, and displayed an impartiality, tact and patience beyond all
+ praise. To them Russia is in great part indebted for the peaceful
+ character of the Emancipation. Had they sacrificed the general good to the
+ interests of their class, or had they habitually acted in that stern,
+ administrative, military spirit which caused the instances of bloodshed
+ above referred to, the prophecies of the alarmists would, in all
+ probability, have been realised, and the historian of the Emancipation
+ would have had a terrible list of judicial massacres to record.
+ Fortunately they played the part of mediators, as their name signified,
+ rather than that of administrators in the bureaucratic sense of the term,
+ and they were animated with a just and humane rather than a merely legal
+ spirit. Instead of simply laying down the law, and ordering their
+ decisions to be immediately executed, they were ever ready to spend hours
+ in trying to conquer, by patient and laborious reasoning, the unjust
+ claims of proprietors or the false conceptions and ignorant obstinacy of
+ the peasants. It was a new spectacle for Russia to see a public function
+ fulfilled by conscientious men who had their heart in their work, who
+ sought neither promotion nor decorations, and who paid less attention to
+ the punctilious observance of prescribed formalities than to the real
+ objects in view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were, it is true, a few men to whom this description does not apply.
+ Some of these were unduly under the influence of the feelings and
+ conceptions created by serfage. Some, on the contrary, erred on the other
+ side. Desirous of securing the future welfare of the peasantry and of
+ gaining for themselves a certain kind of popularity, and at the same time
+ animated with a violent spirit of pseudo-liberalism, these latter
+ occasionally forgot that their duty was to be, not generous, but just, and
+ that they had no right to practise generosity at other people's expense.
+ All this I am quite aware of&mdash;I could even name one or two Arbiters
+ who were guilty of positive dishonesty&mdash;but I hold that these were
+ rare exceptions. The great majority did their duty faithfully and well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The work of concluding contracts for the redemption of the dues, or, in
+ other words, for the purchase of the land ceded in perpetual usufruct,
+ proceeded slowly. The arrangement was as follows:&mdash;The dues were
+ capitalised at six per cent., and the Government paid at once to the
+ proprietors four-fifths of the whole sum. The peasants were to pay to the
+ proprietor the remaining fifth, either at once or in installments, and to
+ the Government six per cent. for forty-nine years on the sum advanced. The
+ proprietors willingly adopted this arrangement, for it provided them with
+ a sum of ready money, and freed them from the difficult task of collecting
+ the dues. But the peasants did not show much desire to undertake the
+ operation. Some of them still expected a second Emancipation, and those
+ who did not take this possibility into their calculations were little
+ disposed to make present sacrifices for distant prospective advantages
+ which would not be realised for half a century. In most cases the
+ proprietor was obliged to remit, in whole or in part, the fifth to be paid
+ by the peasants. Many Communes refused to undertake the operation on any
+ conditions and in consequence of this not a few proprietors demanded the
+ so-called obligatory redemption, according to which they accepted the
+ four-fifths from the Government as full payment, and the operation was
+ thus effected without the peasants being consulted. The total number of
+ male serfs emancipated was about nine millions and three-quarters,* and of
+ these, only about seven millions and a quarter had, at the beginning of
+ 1875, made redemption contracts. Of the contracts signed at that time,
+ about sixty-three per cent, were "obligatory." In 1887 the redemption was
+ made obligatory for both parties, so that all Communes are now proprietors
+ of the land previously held in perpetual usufruct; and in 1932 the debt
+ will have been extinguished by the sinking fund, and all redemption
+ payments will have ceased.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This does not include the domestic serfs who did not
+ receive land.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The serfs were thus not only liberated, but also made possessors of land
+ and put on the road to becoming Communal proprietors, and the old Communal
+ institutions were preserved and developed. In answer to the question, Who
+ effected this gigantic reform? we may say that the chief merit undoubtedly
+ belongs to Alexander II. Had he not possessed a very great amount of
+ courage he would neither have raised the question nor allowed it to be
+ raised by others, and had he not shown a great deal more decision and
+ energy than was expected, the solution would have been indefinitely
+ postponed. Among the members of his own family he found an able and
+ energetic assistant in his brother, the Grand Duke Constantine, and a warm
+ sympathiser with the cause in the Grand Duchess Helena, a German Princess
+ thoroughly devoted to the welfare of her adopted country. But we must not
+ overlook the important part played by the nobles. Their conduct was very
+ characteristic. As soon as the question was raised a large number of them
+ adopted the liberal ideas with enthusiasm; and as soon as it became
+ evident that Emancipation was inevitable, all made a holocaust of their
+ ancient rights and demanded to be liberated at once from all relations
+ with their serfs. Moreover, when the law was passed it was the proprietors
+ who faithfully put it into execution. Lastly, we should remember that
+ praise is due to the peasantry for their patience under disappointment and
+ for their orderly conduct as soon as they understood the law and
+ recognised it to be the will of the Tsar. Thus it may justly be said that
+ the Emancipation was not the work of one man, or one party, or one class,
+ but of the nation as a whole.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The names most commonly associated with the Emancipation
+ are General Rostoftsef, Lanskoi (Minister of the Interior),
+ Nicholas Milutin, Prince Tchererkassky, G. Samarin,
+ Koshelef. Many others, such as I. A. Solovief, Zhukofski,
+ Domontovitch, Giers&mdash;brother of M. Giers, afterwards
+ Minister for Foreign Affairs&mdash;are less known, but did
+ valuable work. To all of these, with the exception of the
+ first two, who died before my arrival in Russia, I have to
+ confess my obligations. The late Nicholas Milutin rendered
+ me special service by putting at my disposal not only all
+ the official papers in his possession, but also many
+ documents of a more private kind. By his early and lamented
+ death Russia lost one of the greatest statesmen she has yet
+ produced.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXX
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE LANDED PROPRIETORS SINCE THE EMANCIPATION
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Two Opposite Opinions&mdash;Difficulties of Investigation&mdash;The
+ Problem Simplified&mdash;Direct and Indirect Compensation&mdash;The Direct
+ Compensation Inadequate&mdash;What the Proprietors Have Done with the
+ Remainder of Their Estates&mdash;Immediate Moral Effect of the Abolition
+ of Serfage&mdash;The Economic Problem&mdash;The Ideal Solution and the
+ Difficulty of Realising It&mdash;More Primitive Arrangements&mdash;The
+ Northern Agricultural Zone&mdash;The Black-earth Zone&mdash;The Labour
+ Difficulty&mdash;The Impoverishment of the Noblesse Not a New Phenomenon&mdash;Mortgaging
+ of Estates&mdash;Gradual Expropriation of the Noblesse-Rapid Increase in
+ the Production and Export of Grain&mdash;How Far this Has Benefited the
+ Landed Proprietors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Emancipation question was raised there was a considerable
+ diversity of opinion as to the effect which the abolition of serfage would
+ have on the material interests of the two classes directly concerned. The
+ Press and "the young generation" took an optimistic view, and endeavoured
+ to prove that the proposed change would be beneficial alike to proprietors
+ and to peasants. Science, it was said, has long since decided that free
+ labour is immensely more productive than slavery or serfage, and the
+ principle has been already proved to demonstration in the countries of
+ Western Europe. In all those countries modern agricultural progress began
+ with the emancipation of the serfs, and increased productivity was
+ everywhere the immediate result of improvements in the method of culture.
+ Thus the poor light soils of Germany, France, and Holland have been made
+ to produce more than the vaunted "black earth" of Russia. And from these
+ ameliorations the land-owning class has everywhere derived the chief
+ advantages. Are not the landed proprietors of England&mdash;the country in
+ which serfage was first abolished&mdash;the richest in the world? And is
+ not the proprietor of a few hundred morgen in Germany often richer than
+ the Russian noble who has thousands of dessyatins? By these and similar
+ plausible arguments the Press endeavoured to prove to the proprietors that
+ they ought, even in their own interest, to undertake the emancipation of
+ the serfs. Many proprietors, however, showed little faith in the abstract
+ principles of political economy and the vague teachings of history as
+ interpreted by the contemporary periodical literature. They could not
+ always refute the ingenious arguments adduced by the men of more sanguine
+ temperament, but they felt convinced that their prospects were not nearly
+ so bright as these men represented them to be. They believed that Russia
+ was a peculiar country, and the Russians a peculiar people. The lower
+ classes in England, France, Holland, and Germany were well known to be
+ laborious and enterprising, while the Russian peasant was notoriously
+ lazy, and would certainly, if left to himself, not do more work than was
+ absolutely necessary to keep him from starving. Free labour might be more
+ profitable than serfage in countries where the upper classes possessed
+ traditional practical knowledge and abundance of capital, but in Russia
+ the proprietors had neither the practical knowledge nor the ready money
+ necessary to make the proposed ameliorations in the system of agriculture.
+ To all this it was added that a system of emancipation by which the
+ peasants should receive land and be made completely independent of the
+ landed proprietors had nowhere been tried on such a large scale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were thus two diametrically opposite opinions regarding the economic
+ results of the abolition of serfage, and we have now to examine which of
+ these two opinions has been confirmed by experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us look at the question first from the point of view of the
+ land-owners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader who has never attempted to make investigations of this kind may
+ naturally imagine that the question can be easily decided by simply
+ consulting a large number of individual proprietors, and drawing a general
+ conclusion from their evidence. In reality I found the task much more
+ difficult. After roaming about the country for five years (1870-75),
+ collecting information from the best available sources, I hesitated to
+ draw any sweeping conclusions, and my state of mind at that time was
+ naturally reflected in the early editions of this work. As a rule the
+ proprietors could not state clearly how much they had lost or gained, and
+ when definite information was obtained from them it was not always
+ trustworthy. In the time of serfage very few of them had been in the habit
+ of keeping accurate accounts, or accounts of any kind, and when they lived
+ on their estates there were a very large number of items which could not
+ possibly be reduced to figures. Of course, each proprietor had a general
+ idea as to whether his position was better or worse than it had been in
+ the old times, but the vague statements made by individuals regarding
+ their former and their actual revenues had little or no scientific value.
+ So many considerations which had nothing to do with purely agrarian
+ relations entered into the calculations that the conclusions did not help
+ me much to estimate the economic results of the Emancipation as a whole.
+ Nor, it must be confessed, was the testimony by any means always
+ unbiassed. Not a few spoke of the great reform in an epic or dithyrambic
+ tone, and among these I easily distinguished two categories: the one
+ desired to prove that the measure was a complete success in every way, and
+ that all classes were benefited by it, not only morally, but also
+ materially; whilst the others strove to represent the proprietors in
+ general, and themselves in particular, as the self-sacrificing victims of
+ a great and necessary patriotic reform&mdash;as martyrs in the cause of
+ liberty and progress. I do not for a moment suppose that these two groups
+ of witnesses had a clearly conceived intention of deceiving or misleading,
+ but as a cautious investigator I had to make allowance for their
+ idealising and sentimental tendencies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since that time the situation has become much clearer, and during recent
+ visits to Russia I have been able to arrive at much more definite
+ conclusions. These I now proceed to communicate to the reader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Emancipation caused the proprietors of all classes to pass through a
+ severe economic crisis. Periods of transition always involve much
+ suffering, and the amount of suffering is generally in the inverse ratio
+ of the precautions taken beforehand. In Russia the precautions had been
+ neglected. Not one proprietor in a hundred had made any serious
+ preparations for the inevitable change. On the eve of the Emancipation
+ there were about ten millions of male serfs on private properties, and of
+ these nearly seven millions remained under the old system of paying their
+ dues in labour. Of course, everybody knew that Emancipation must come
+ sooner or later, but fore-thought, prudence, and readiness to take time by
+ the forelock are not among the prominent traits of the Russian character.
+ Hence most of the land-owners were taken unawares. But while all suffered,
+ there were differences of degree. Some were completely shipwrecked. So
+ long as serfage existed all the relations of life were ill-defined and
+ extremely elastic, so that a man who was hopelessly insolvent might
+ contrive, with very little effort, to keep his head above water for half a
+ lifetime. For such men the Emancipation, like a crisis in the commercial
+ world, brought a day of reckoning. It did not really ruin them, but it
+ showed them and the world at large that they were ruined, and they could
+ no longer continue their old mode of life. For others the crisis was
+ merely temporary. These emerged with a larger income than they ever had
+ before, but I am not prepared to say that their material condition has
+ improved, because the social habits have changed, the cost of living has
+ become much greater, and the work of administering estates is incomparably
+ more complicated and laborious than in the old patriarchal times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may greatly simplify the problem by reducing it to two definite
+ questions:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. How far were the proprietors directly indemnified for the loss of serf
+ labour and for the transfer in perpetual usufruct of a large part of their
+ estates to the peasantry?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. What have the proprietors done with the remainder of their estates, and
+ how far have they been indirectly indemnified by the economic changes
+ which have taken place since the Emancipation?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the first of these questions I shall deal very briefly, because it is
+ a controversial subject involving very complicated calculations which only
+ a specialist can understand. The conclusion at which I have arrived, after
+ much patient research, is that in most provinces the compensation was
+ inadequate, and this conclusion is confirmed by excellent native
+ authorities. M. Bekhteyev, for example, one of the most laborious and
+ conscientious investigators in this field of research, and the author of
+ an admirable work on the economic results of the Emancipation,* told me
+ recently, in course of conversation, that in his opinion the peasant dues
+ fixed by the Emancipation Law represented, throughout the Black-earth
+ Zone, only about a half of the value of the labour previously supplied by
+ the serfs. To this I must add that the compensation was in reality not
+ nearly so great as it seemed to be according to the terms of the law. As
+ the proprietors found it extremely difficult to collect the dues from the
+ emancipated serfs, and as they required a certain amount of capital to
+ reorganise the estate on the new basis of free labour, most of them were
+ practically compelled to demand the obligatory redemption of the land
+ (obiazatelny vuikup), and in adopting this expedient they had to make
+ considerable sacrifices. Not only had they to accept as full payment
+ four-fifths of the normal sum, but of this amount the greater portion was
+ paid in Treasury bonds, which fell at once to 80 per cent. of their
+ nominal value.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * "Khozaistvenniye Itogi istekshago Sorokoletiya." St.
+ Petersburg, 1902.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Let us now pass to the second part of the problem: What have the
+ proprietors done with the part of their estates which remained to them
+ after ceding the required amount of land to the Communes? Have they been
+ indirectly indemnified for the loss of serf labour by subsequent economic
+ changes? How far have they succeeded in making the transition from serfage
+ to free labour, and what revenues do they now derive from their estates?
+ The answer to these questions will necessarily contain some account of the
+ present economic position of the proprietors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On all proprietors the Emancipation had at least one good effect: it
+ dragged them forcibly from the old path of indolence and routine and
+ compelled them to think and calculate regarding their affairs. The
+ hereditary listlessness and apathy, the traditional habit of looking on
+ the estate with its serfs as a kind of self-acting machine which must
+ always spontaneously supply the owner with the means of living, the
+ inveterate practice of spending all ready money and of taking little heed
+ for the morrow&mdash;all this, with much that resulted from it, was rudely
+ swept away and became a thing of the past.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The broad, easy road on which the proprietors had hitherto let themselves
+ be borne along by the force of circumstances suddenly split up into a
+ number of narrow, arduous, thorny paths. Each one had to use his judgement
+ to determine which of the paths he should adopt, and, having made his
+ choice, he had to struggle along as he best could. I remember once asking
+ a proprietor what effect the Emancipation had had on the class to which he
+ belonged, and he gave me an answer which is worth recording. "Formerly,"
+ he said, "we kept no accounts and drank champagne; now we keep accounts
+ and content ourselves with kvass." Like all epigrammatic sayings, this
+ laconic reply is far from giving a complete description of reality, but it
+ indicates in a graphic way a change that has unquestionably taken place.
+ As soon as serfage was abolished it was no longer possible to live like
+ "the flowers of the field." Many a proprietor who had formerly vegetated
+ in apathetic ease had to ask himself the question: How am I to gain a
+ living? All had to consider what was the most profitable way of employing
+ the land that remained to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ideal solution of the problem was that as soon as the peasant-land had
+ been demarcated, the proprietor should take to farming the remainder of
+ his estate by means of hired labour and agricultural machines in West
+ European or American fashion. Unfortunately, this solution could not be
+ generally adopted, because the great majority of the landlords, even when
+ they had the requisite practical knowledge of agriculture, had not the
+ requisite capital, and could not easily obtain it. Where were they to find
+ money for buying cattle, horses, and agricultural implements, for building
+ stables and cattle-sheds, and for defraying all the other initial
+ expenses? And supposing they succeeded in starting the new system, where
+ was the working capital to come from? The old Government institution in
+ which estates could be mortgaged according to the number of serfs was
+ permanently closed, and the new land-credit associations had not yet come
+ into existence. To borrow from private capitalists was not to be thought
+ of, for money was so scarce than ten per cent. was considered a "friendly"
+ rate of interest. Recourse might be had, it is true, to the redemption
+ operation, but in that case the Government would deduct the unpaid portion
+ of any outstanding mortgage, and would pay the balance in depreciated
+ Treasury bonds. In these circumstances the proprietors could not, as a
+ rule, adopt what I have called the ideal solution, and had to content
+ themselves with some simpler and more primitive arrangement. They could
+ employ the peasants of the neighbouring villages to prepare the land and
+ reap the crops either for a fixed sum per acre or on the metayage system,
+ or they could let their land to the peasants for one, three or six years
+ at a moderate rent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the northern agricultural zone, where the soil is poor and primitive
+ farming with free labour can hardly be made to pay, the proprietors had to
+ let their land at a small rent, and those of them who could not find
+ places in the rural administration migrated to the towns and sought
+ employment in the public service or in the numerous commercial and
+ industrial enterprises which were springing up at that time. There they
+ have since remained. Their country-houses, if inhabited at all, are
+ occupied only for a few months in summer, and too often present a
+ melancholy spectacle of neglect and dilapidation. In the Black-earth Zone,
+ on the contrary, where the soil still possesses enough of its natural
+ fertility to make farming on a large scale profitable, the estates are in
+ a very different condition. The owners cultivate at least a part of their
+ property, and can easily let to the peasants at a fair rent the land which
+ they do not wish to farm themselves. Some have adopted the metayage
+ system; others get the field-work done by the peasants at so much per
+ acre. The more energetic, who have capital enough at their disposal,
+ organise farms with hired labourers on the European model. If they are not
+ so well off as formerly, it is because they have adopted a less
+ patriarchal and more expensive style of living. Their land has doubled and
+ trebled in value during the last thirty years, and their revenues have
+ increased, if not in proportion, at least considerably. In 1903 I visited
+ a number of estates in this region and found them in a very prosperous
+ condition, with agricultural machines of the English or American types, an
+ increasing variety in the rotation of crops, greatly improved breeds of
+ cattle and horses, and all the other symptoms of a gradual transition to a
+ more intensive and more rational system of agriculture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be admitted, however, that even in the Black-earth Zone the
+ proprietors have formidable difficulties to contend with, the chief of
+ which are the scarcity of good farm-labourers, the frequent droughts, the
+ low price of cereals, and the delay in getting the grain conveyed to the
+ seaports. On each of these difficulties and the remedies that might be
+ applied I could write a separate chapter, but I fear to overtax the
+ reader's patience, and shall therefore confine myself to a few remarks
+ about the labour question. On this subject the complaints are loud and
+ frequent all over the country. The peasants, it is said, have become lazy,
+ careless, addicted to drunkenness, and shamelessly dishonest with regard
+ to their obligations, so that it is difficult to farm even in the old
+ primitive fashion and impossible to introduce radical improvements in the
+ methods of culture. In these sweeping accusations there is a certain
+ amount of truth. That the muzhik, when working for others, exerts himself
+ as little as possible; that he pays little attention to the quality of the
+ work done; that he shows a reckless carelessness with regard to his
+ employer's property; that he is capable of taking money in advance and
+ failing to fulfil his contract; that he occasionally gets drunk; and that
+ he is apt to commit certain acts of petty larceny when he gets the chance&mdash;all
+ this is undoubtedly true, whatever biassed theorists and sentimental
+ peasant-worshippers may say to the contrary.* It would be a mistake,
+ however, to suppose that the fault is entirely on the side of the
+ peasants, and equally erroneous to believe that the evils might be
+ remedied, as is often suggested, by greater severity on the part of the
+ tribunals, or by an improved system of passports. Farming with free
+ labour, like every other department of human activity, requires a fair
+ amount of knowledge, judgment, prudence, and tact, which cannot be
+ replaced by ingenious legislation or judicial severity. In engaging
+ labourers or servants it is necessary to select them carefully and make
+ such conditions that they feel it to be to their interest to fulfil their
+ contract loyally. This is too often overlooked by the Russian land-owners.
+ From false views of economy they are inclined to choose the cheapest
+ labourer without examining closely his other qualifications, or they take
+ advantage of the peasant's pecuniary embarrassments and make with him a
+ contract which it is hardly possible for him to fulfil. In spring, for
+ instance, when his store of provisions is exhausted and he is being hard
+ pressed by the tax-collector, they supply him with rye-meal or advance him
+ a small sum of money on condition of his undertaking to do a relatively
+ large amount of summer work. He knows that the contract is unfair to him,
+ but what is he to do? He must get food for himself and his family and a
+ little ready money for his taxes, for the Communal authorities will
+ probably sell his cow if he does not pay his arrears.** In desperation he
+ accepts the conditions and puts off the evil day&mdash;consoling himself
+ with the reflection that perhaps (avos') something may turn up in the
+ meantime&mdash;but when the time comes for fulfilling his engagements the
+ dilemma revives. According to the contract he ought to work nearly the
+ whole summer for the proprietor; but he has his own land to attend to, and
+ he has to make provision for the winter. In such circumstances the
+ temptation to evade the terms of the contract is probably too strong to be
+ resisted.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Amongst themselves the peasants are not addicted to
+ thieving, as is proved by the fact that they habitually
+ leave their doors unlocked when the inmates of the house are
+ working in the fields; but if the muzhik finds in the
+ proprietor's farmyard a piece of iron or a bit of rope, or
+ any of those little things that he constantly requires and
+ has difficulty in obtaining, he is very apt to pick it up
+ and carry it home. Gathering firewood in the landlord's
+ forest he does not consider as theft, because "God planted
+ the trees and watered them," and in the time of serfage he
+ was allowed to supply himself with firewood in this way.
+
+ ** Until last year (1904) they could use also corporal
+ punishment as a means of pressure, and I am not sure that
+ they do not occasionally use it still, though it is no
+ longer permitted by law.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In Russia, as in other countries, the principle holds true that for good
+ labour a fair price must be paid. Several large proprietors of my
+ acquaintance who habitually act on this principle assure me that they
+ always obtain as much good labour as they require. I must add, however,
+ that these fortunate proprietors have the advantage of possessing a
+ comfortable amount of working capital, and are therefore not compelled, as
+ so many of their less fortunate neighbours are, to manage their estates on
+ the hand-to-mouth principle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is only, I fear, a minority of the landed proprietors that have
+ grappled successfully with these and other difficulties of their position.
+ As a class they are impoverished and indebted, but this state of things is
+ not due entirely to serf-emancipation. The indebtedness of the Noblesse is
+ a hereditary peculiarity of much older date. By some authorities it is
+ attributed to the laws of Peter the Great, by which all nobles were
+ obliged to spend the best part of their lives in the military or civil
+ service, and to leave the management of their estates to incompetent
+ stewards. However that may be, it is certain that from the middle of the
+ eighteenth century downwards the fact has frequently occupied the
+ attention of the Government, and repeated attempts have been made to
+ alleviate the evil. The Empress Elizabeth, Catherine II., Paul, Alexander
+ I., Nicholas I., Alexander II., and Alexander III. tried successively, as
+ one of the older ukazes expressed it, "to free the Noblesse from debt and
+ from greedy money-lenders, and to prevent hereditary estates from passing
+ into the hands of strangers." The means commonly adopted was the creation
+ of mortgage banks founded and controlled by the Government for the purpose
+ of advancing money to landed proprietors at a comparatively low rate of
+ interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These institutions may have been useful to the few who desired to improve
+ their estates, but they certainly did not cure, and rather tended to
+ foster, the inveterate improvidence of the many. On the eve of the
+ Emancipation the proprietors were indebted to the Government for the sum
+ of 425 millions of roubles, and 69 per cent. of their serfs were
+ mortgaged. A portion of this debt was gradually extinguished by the
+ redemption operation, so that in 1880 over 300 millions had been paid off,
+ but in the meantime new debts were being contracted. In 1873-74 nine
+ private land-mortgage banks were created, and there was such a rush to
+ obtain money from them that their paper was a glut in the market, and
+ became seriously depreciated. When the prices of grain rose in 1875-80 the
+ mortgage debt was diminished, but when they began to fall in 1880 it again
+ increased, and in 1881 it stood at 396 millions. As the rate of interest
+ was felt to be very burdensome there was a strong feeling among the landed
+ proprietors at that time that the Government ought to help them, and in
+ 1883 the nobles of the province of Orel ventured to address the Emperor on
+ the subject. In reply to the address, Alexander III., who had strong
+ Conservative leanings, was graciously pleased to declare in an ukaz that
+ "it was really time to do something to help the Noblesse," and accordingly
+ a new land-mortgage bank for the Noblesse was created. The favourable
+ terms offered by it were taken advantage of to such an extent that in the
+ first four years of its activity (1886-90) it advanced to the proprietors
+ over 200 million roubles. Then came two famine years, and in 1894 the
+ mortgage debt of the Noblesse in that and other credit establishments was
+ estimated at 994 millions. It has since probably increased rather than
+ diminished, for in that year the prices of grain began to fall steadily on
+ all the corn-exchanges of the world, and they have never since recovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By means of mortgages some proprietors succeeded in weathering the storm,
+ but many gave up the struggle altogether, and settled in the towns. In the
+ space of thirty years 20,000 of them sold their estates, and thus, between
+ 1861 and 1892, the area of land possessed by the Noblesse diminished 30
+ per cent.&mdash;from 77,804,000 to 55,500,000 dessyatins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This expropriation of the Noblesse, as it is called, was evidently not the
+ result merely of the temporary economic disturbance caused by the
+ abolition of serfage, for as time went on it became more rapid. During the
+ first twenty years the average annual amount of Noblesse land sold was
+ 517,000 dessyatins, and it rose steadily until 1892-96, when it reached
+ the amount of 785,000. As I have already stated, the townward movement of
+ the proprietors was strongest in the barren Northern provinces. In the
+ province of Olonetz, for example, they have already parted with 87 per
+ cent. of their land. In the black-soil region, on the contrary, there is
+ no province in which more than 27 per cent. of the Noblesse land has been
+ alienated, and in one province (Tula) the amount is only 19 per cent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The habit of mortgaging and selling estates does not necessarily mean the
+ impoverishment of the landlords as a class. If the capital raised in that
+ way is devoted to agricultural improvements, the result may be an increase
+ of wealth. Unfortunately, in Russia the realised capital was usually not
+ so employed. A very large proportion of it was spent unproductively,
+ partly in luxuries and living abroad, and partly in unprofitable
+ commercial and industrial speculations. The industrial and railway fever
+ which raged at the time induced many to risk and lose their capital, and
+ it had indirectly an injurious effect on all by making money plentiful in
+ the towns and creating a more expensive style of living, from which the
+ landed gentry could not hold entirely aloof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So far I have dwelt on the dark shadows of the picture, but it is not all
+ shadow. In the last forty years the production and export of grain, which
+ constitute the chief source of revenue for the Noblesse, have increased
+ enormously, thanks mainly to the improved means of transport. In the first
+ decade after the Emancipation (1860-70) the average annual export did not
+ exceed 88 million puds; in the second decade (1870-80) it leapt up to 218
+ millions; and so it went up steadily until in the last decade of the
+ century it had reached 388 millions&mdash;i.e., over six million tons. At
+ the same time the home trade had increased likewise in consequence of the
+ rapidly growing population of the towns. All this must have enriched the
+ land-proprietors. Not to such an extent, it is true, as the figures seem
+ to indicate, because the old prices could not be maintained. Rye, for
+ example, which in 1868 stood at 129 kopeks per pud, fell as low as 56, and
+ during the rest of the century, except during a short time in 1881-82 and
+ the famine years of 1891-92, when there was very little surplus to sell,
+ it never rose above 80. Still, the increase in quantity more than
+ counterbalanced the fall in price. For example: in 1881 the average price
+ of grain per pud was 119, and in 1894 it had sunk to 59; but the amount
+ exported during that time rose from 203 to 617 million puds, and the sum
+ received for it had risen from 242 to 369 millions of roubles. Surely the
+ whole of that enormous sum was not squandered on luxuries and unprofitable
+ speculation!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pessimists, however&mdash;and in Russia their name is legion&mdash;will
+ not admit that any permanent advantage has been derived from this enormous
+ increase in exports. On the contrary, they maintain that it is a national
+ misfortune, because it is leading rapidly to a state of permanent
+ impoverishment. It quickly exhausted, they say, the large reserves of
+ grain in the village, so that as soon as there was a very bad harvest the
+ Government had to come to the rescue and feed the starving peasantry.
+ Worse than this, it compromised the future prosperity of the country.
+ Being in pecuniary difficulties, and consequently impatient to make money,
+ the proprietors increased inordinately the area of grain-producing land at
+ the expense of pasturage and forests, with the result that the live stock
+ and the manuring of the land were diminished, the fertility of the soil
+ impaired, and the necessary quantity of moisture in the atmosphere greatly
+ lessened. There is some truth in this contention; but it would seem that
+ the soil and climate have not been affected so much as the pessimists
+ suppose, because in recent years there have been some very good harvests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the whole, then, I think it may be justly said that the efforts of the
+ landed proprietors to work their estates without serf labour have not as
+ yet been brilliantly successful. Those who have failed are in the habit of
+ complaining that they have not received sufficient support from the
+ Government, which is accused of having systematically sacrificed the
+ interests of agriculture, the mainstay of the national resources, to the
+ creation of artificial and unnecessary manufacturing industries. How far
+ such complaints and accusations are well founded I shall not attempt to
+ decide. It is a complicated polemical question, into which the reader
+ would probably decline to accompany me. Let us examine rather what
+ influence the above-mentioned changes have had on the peasantry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0031" id="link2HCH0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE EMANCIPATED PEASANTRY
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The Effects of Liberty&mdash;Difficulty of Obtaining Accurate Information&mdash;Pessimist
+ Testimony of the Proprietors&mdash;Vague Replies of the Peasants&mdash;My
+ Conclusions in 1877&mdash;Necessity of Revising Them&mdash;My
+ Investigations Renewed in 1903&mdash;Recent Researches by Native Political
+ Economists&mdash;Peasant Impoverishment Universally Recognised&mdash;Various
+ Explanations Suggested&mdash;Demoralisation of the Common People&mdash;Peasant
+ Self-government&mdash;Communal System of Land Tenure&mdash;Heavy Taxation&mdash;Disruption
+ of Peasant Families&mdash;Natural Increase of Population&mdash;Remedies
+ Proposed&mdash;Migration&mdash;Reclamation of Waste Land&mdash;Land-purchase
+ by Peasantry&mdash;Manufacturing Industry&mdash;Improvement of
+ Agricultural Methods&mdash;Indications of Progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the commencement of last chapter I pointed out in general terms the
+ difficulty of describing clearly the immediate consequences of the
+ Emancipation. In beginning now to speak of the influence which the great
+ reform has had on the peasantry, I feel that the difficulty has reached
+ its climax. The foreigner who desires merely to gain a general idea of the
+ subject cannot be expected to take an interest in details, and even if he
+ took the trouble to examine them attentively, he would derive from the
+ labour little real information. What he wishes is a clear, concise, and
+ dogmatic statement of general results. Has the material and moral
+ condition of the peasantry improved since the Emancipation? That is the
+ simple question which he has to put, and he naturally expects a simple,
+ categorical answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In beginning my researches in this interesting field of inquiry, I had no
+ adequate conception of the difficulties awaiting me. I imagined that I had
+ merely to question intelligent, competent men who had had abundant
+ opportunities of observation, and to criticise and boil down the
+ information collected; but when I put this method of investigation to the
+ test of experience it proved unsatisfactory. Very soon I came to perceive
+ that my authorities were very far from being impartial observers. Most of
+ them were evidently suffering from shattered illusions. They had expected
+ that the Emancipation would produce instantaneously a wonderful
+ improvement in the life and character of the rural population, and that
+ the peasant would become at once a sober, industrious, model
+ agriculturist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These expectations were not realised. One year passed, five years passed,
+ ten years passed, and the expected transformation did not take place. On
+ the contrary, there appeared certain very ugly phenomena which were not at
+ all in the programme. The peasants began to drink more and to work less,*
+ and the public life which the Communal institutions produced was by no
+ means of a desirable kind. The "bawlers" (gorlopany) acquired a
+ prejudicial influence in the Village Assemblies, and in very many Volosts
+ the peasant judges, elected by their fellow-villagers, acquired a bad
+ habit of selling their decisions for vodka. The natural consequence of all
+ this was that those who had indulged in exaggerated expectations sank into
+ a state of inordinate despondency, and imagined things to be much worse
+ than they really were.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * I am not at all sure that the peasants really drank more,
+ but such was, and still is, a very general conviction.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ For different reasons, those who had not indulged in exaggerated
+ expectations, and had not sympathised with the Emancipation in the form in
+ which it was effected, were equally inclined to take a pessimistic view of
+ the situation. In every ugly phenomenon they found a confirmation of their
+ opinions. The result was precisely what they had foretold. The peasants
+ had used their liberty and their privileges to their own detriment and to
+ the detriment of others!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The extreme "Liberals" were also inclined, for reasons of their own, to
+ join in the doleful chorus. They desired that the condition of the
+ peasantry should be further improved by legislative enactments, and
+ accordingly they painted the evils in as dark colours as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, from various reasons, the majority of the educated classes were
+ unduly disposed to represent to themselves and to others the actual
+ condition of the peasantry in a very unfavourable light, and I felt that
+ from them there was no hope of obtaining the lumen siccum which I desired.
+ I determined, therefore, to try the method of questioning the peasants
+ themselves. Surely they must know whether their condition was better or
+ worse than it had been before their Emancipation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again I was doomed to disappointment. A few months' experience sufficed to
+ convince me that my new method was by no means so effectual as I had
+ imagined. Uneducated people rarely make generalisations which have no
+ practical utility, and I feel sure that very few Russian peasants ever put
+ to themselves the question: Am I better off now than I was in the time of
+ serfage? When such a question is put to them they feel taken aback. And in
+ truth it is no easy matter to sum up the two sides of the account and draw
+ an accurate balance, save in those exceptional cases in which the
+ proprietor flagrantly abused his authority. The present money-dues and
+ taxes are often more burdensome than the labour-dues in the old times. If
+ the serfs had a great many ill-defined obligations to fulfil&mdash;such as
+ the carting of the master's grain to market, the preparing of his
+ firewood, the supplying him with eggs, chickens, home-made linen, and the
+ like&mdash;they had, on the other hand, a good many ill-defined
+ privileges. They grazed their cattle during a part of the year on the
+ manor-land; they received firewood and occasionally logs for repairing
+ their huts; sometimes the proprietor lent them or gave them a cow or a
+ horse when they had been visited by the cattle-plague or the
+ horse-stealer; and in times of famine they could look to their master for
+ support. All this has now come to an end. Their burdens and their
+ privileges have been swept away together, and been replaced by clearly
+ defined, unbending, unelastic legal relations. They have now to pay the
+ market-price for every stick of firewood which they burn, for every log
+ which they require for repairing their houses, and for every rood of land
+ on which to graze their cattle. Nothing is now to be had gratis. The
+ demand to pay is encountered at every step. If a cow dies or a horse is
+ stolen, the owner can no longer go to the proprietor with the hope of
+ receiving a present, or at least a loan without interest, but must, if he
+ has no ready money, apply to the village usurer, who probably considers
+ twenty or thirty per cent, as a by no means exorbitant rate of interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides this, from the economic point of view village life has been
+ completely revolutionised. Formerly the members of a peasant family
+ obtained from their ordinary domestic resources nearly all they required.
+ Their food came from their fields, cabbage-garden, and farmyard. Materials
+ for clothing were supplied by their plots of flax and their sheep, and
+ were worked up into linen and cloth by the female members of the
+ household. Fuel, as I have said, and torches wherewith to light the izba&mdash;for
+ oil was too expensive and petroleum was unknown&mdash;were obtained
+ gratis. Their sheep, cattle, and horses were bred at home, and their
+ agricultural implements, except in so far as a little iron was required,
+ could be made by themselves without any pecuniary expenditure. Money was
+ required only for the purchase of a few cheap domestic utensils, such as
+ pots, pans, knives, hatchets, wooden dishes, and spoons, and for the
+ payment of taxes, which were small in amount and often paid by the
+ proprietor. In these circumstances the quantity of money in circulation
+ among the peasants was infinitesimally small, the few exchanges which took
+ place in a village being generally effected by barter. The taxes, and the
+ vodka required for village festivals, weddings, or funerals, were the only
+ large items of expenditure for the year, and they were generally covered
+ by the sums brought home by the members of the family who went to work in
+ the towns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very different is the present condition of affairs. The spinning, weaving,
+ and other home industries have been killed by the big factories, and the
+ flax and wool have to be sold to raise a little ready money for the
+ numerous new items of expenditure. Everything has to be bought&mdash;clothes,
+ firewood, petroleum, improved agricultural implements, and many other
+ articles which are now regarded as necessaries of life, whilst
+ comparatively little is earned by working in the towns, because the big
+ families have been broken up, and a household now consists usually of
+ husband and wife, who must both remain at home, and children who are not
+ yet bread-winners. Recalling to mind all these things and the other
+ drawbacks and advantages of his actual position, the old muzhik has
+ naturally much difficulty in striking a balance, and he may well be quite
+ sincere when, on being asked whether things now are on the whole better or
+ worse than in the time of serfage, he scratches the back of his head and
+ replies hesitatingly, with a mystified expression on his wrinkled face:
+ "How shall I say to you? They are both better and worse!" ("Kak vam
+ skazat'? I lûtche i khûdzhe!") If, however, you press him further and ask
+ whether he would himself like to return to the old state of things, he is
+ pretty sure to answer, with a slow shake of the head and a twinkle in his
+ eye, as if some forgotten item in the account had suddenly recurred to
+ him: "Oh, no!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What materially increases the difficulty of this general computation is
+ that great changes have taken place in the well-being of the particular
+ households. Some have greatly prospered, while others have become
+ impoverished. That is one of the most characteristic consequences of the
+ Emancipation. In the old times the general economic stagnation and the
+ uncontrolled authority of the proprietor tended to keep all the households
+ of a village on the same level. There was little opportunity for an
+ intelligent, enterprising serf to become rich, and if he contrived to
+ increase his revenue he had probably to give a considerable share of it to
+ the proprietor, unless he had the good fortune to belong to a grand
+ seigneur like Count Sheremetief, who was proud of having rich men among
+ his serfs. On the other hand, the proprietor, for evident reasons of
+ self-interest, as well as from benevolent motives, prevented the less
+ intelligent and less enterprising members of the Commune from becoming
+ bankrupt. The Communal equality thus artificially maintained has now
+ disappeared, the restrictions on individual freedom of action have been
+ removed, the struggle for life has become intensified, and, as always
+ happens in such circumstances, the strong men go up in the world while the
+ weak ones go to the wall. All over the country we find on the one hand the
+ beginnings of a village aristocracy&mdash;or perhaps we should call it a
+ plutocracy, for it is based on money&mdash;and on the other hand an
+ ever-increasing pauperism. Some peasants possess capital, with which they
+ buy land outside the Commune or embark in trade, while others have to sell
+ their live stock, and have sometimes to cede to neighbours their share of
+ the Communal property. This change in rural life is so often referred to
+ that, in order to express it a new, barbarous word, differentsiatsia
+ (differentiation) has been invented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hoping to obtain fuller information with the aid of official protection, I
+ attached myself to one of the travelling sections of an agricultural
+ Commission appointed by the Government, and during a whole summer I helped
+ to collect materials in the provinces bordering on the Volga. The inquiry
+ resulted in a gigantic report of nearly 2,500 folio pages, but the general
+ conclusions were extremely vague. The peasantry, it was said, were
+ passing, like the landed proprietors, through a period of transition, in
+ which the main features of their future normal life had not yet become
+ clearly defined. In some localities their condition had decidedly
+ improved, whereas in others it had improved little or not at all. Then
+ followed a long list of recommendations in favour of Government
+ assistance, better agronomic education, competitive exhibitions, more
+ varied rotation of crops, and greater zeal on the part of the clergy in
+ disseminating among the people moral principles in general and love of
+ work in particular.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not greatly enlightened by this official activity, I returned to my
+ private studies, and at the end of six years I published my impressions
+ and conclusions in the first edition of this work. While recognising that
+ there was much uncertainty as to the future, I was inclined, on the whole,
+ to take a hopeful view of the situation. I was unable, however, to
+ maintain permanently that comfortable frame of mind. After my departure
+ from Russia in 1878, the accounts which reached me from various parts of
+ the country became blacker and blacker, and were partly confirmed by short
+ tours which I made in 1889-1896. At last, in the summer of 1903, I
+ determined to return to some of my old haunts and look at things with my
+ own eyes. At that moment some hospitable friends invited me to pay them a
+ visit at their country-house in the province of Smolensk, and I gladly
+ accepted the invitation, because Smolensk, when I knew it formerly, was
+ one of the poorest provinces, and I thought it well to begin my new
+ studies by examining the impoverishment, of which I had heard so much, at
+ its maximum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the railway station at Viazma, where I arrived one morning at
+ sunrise, I had some twenty miles to drive, and as soon as I got clear of
+ the little town I began my observations. What I saw around me seemed to
+ contradict the sombre accounts I had received. The villages through which
+ I passed had not at all the look of dilapidation and misery which I
+ expected. On the contrary, the houses were larger and better constructed
+ than they used to be, and each of them had a chimney! That latter fact was
+ important because formerly a large proportion of the peasants of this
+ region had no such luxury, and allowed the smoke to find its exit by the
+ open door. In vain I looked for a hut of the old type, and my yamstchik
+ assured me I should have to go a long way to find one. Then I noticed a
+ good many iron ploughs of the European model, and my yamstchik informed me
+ that their predecessor, the sokha with which I had been so familiar, had
+ entirely disappeared from the district. Next I noticed that in the
+ neighbourhood of the villages flax was grown in large quantities. That was
+ certainly not an indication of poverty, because flax is a valuable product
+ which requires to be well manured, and plentiful manure implies a
+ considerable quantity of live stock. Lastly, before arriving at my
+ destination, I noticed clover being grown in the fields. This made me open
+ my eyes with astonishment, because the introduction of artificial grasses
+ into the traditional rotation of crops indicates the transition to a
+ higher and more intensive system of agriculture. As I had never seen
+ clover in Russia except on the estates of very advanced proprietors, I
+ said to my yamstchik:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Listen, little brother! That field belongs to the landlord?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at all, Master; it is muzhik-land."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On arriving at the country-house I told my friends what I had seen, and
+ they explained it to me. Smolensk is no longer one of the poorer
+ provinces; it has become comparatively prosperous. In two or three
+ districts large quantities of flax are produced and give the cultivators a
+ big revenue; in other districts plenty of remunerative work is supplied by
+ the forests. Everywhere a considerable proportion of the younger men go
+ regularly to the towns and bring home savings enough to pay the taxes and
+ make a little surplus in the domestic budget. A few days afterwards the
+ village secretary brought me his books, and showed me that there were
+ practically no arrears of taxation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Passing on to other provinces I found similar proofs of progress and
+ prosperity, but at the same time not a few indications of impoverishment;
+ and I was rapidly relapsing into my previous state of uncertainty as to
+ whether any general conclusions could be drawn, when an old friend,
+ himself a first-rate authority with many years of practical experience,
+ came to my assistance.* He informed me that a number of specialists had
+ recently made detailed investigations into the present economic conditions
+ of the rural population, and he kindly placed at my disposal, in his
+ charming country-house near Moscow, the voluminous researches of these
+ investigators. Here, during a good many weeks, I revelled in the
+ statistical materials collected, and to the best of my ability I tested
+ the conclusions drawn from them. Many of these conclusions I had to
+ dismiss with the Scotch verdict of "not proven," whilst others seemed to
+ me worthy of acceptance. Of these latter the most important were those
+ drawn from the arrears of taxation.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * I hope I am committing no indiscretion when I say that the
+ old friend in question was Prince Alexander Stcherbatof of
+ Vasilefskoe.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The arrears in the payment of taxes may be regarded as a pretty safe
+ barometer for testing the condition of the rural population, because the
+ peasant habitually pays his rates and taxes when he has the means of doing
+ so; when he falls seriously and permanently into arrears it may be assumed
+ that he is becoming impoverished. If the arrears fluctuate from year to
+ year, the causes of the impoverishment may be regarded as accidental and
+ perhaps temporary, but if they steadily accumulate, we must conclude that
+ there is something radically wrong. Bearing these facts in mind, let us
+ hear what the statistics say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the first twenty years after the Emancipation (1861-81) things went
+ on in their old grooves. The poor provinces remained poor, and the fertile
+ provinces showed no signs of distress. During the next twenty years
+ (1881-1901) the arrears of the whole of European Russia rose, roughly
+ speaking, from 27 to 144 millions of roubles, and the increase, strange to
+ say, took place in the fertile provinces. In 1890, for example, out of 52
+ millions, nearly 41 millions, or 78 per cent., fell to the share of the
+ provinces of the Black-earth Zone. In seven of these the average arrears
+ per male, which had been in 1882 only 90 kopeks, rose in 1893 to 600, and
+ in 1899 to 2,200! And this accumulation had taken place in spite of
+ reductions of taxation to the extent of 37 million roubles in 1881-83, and
+ successive famine grants from the Treasury in 1891-99 to the amount of 203
+ millions.* On the other hand, in the provinces with a poor soil the
+ arrears had greatly decreased. In Smolensk, for example, they had sunk
+ from 202 per cent, to 13 per cent. of the annual sum to be paid, and in
+ nearly all the other provinces of the west and north a similar change for
+ the better had taken place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These and many other figures which I might quote show that a great and
+ very curious economic revolution has been gradually effected. The
+ Black-earth Zone, which was formerly regarded as the inexhaustible granary
+ of the Empire, has become impoverished, whilst the provinces which were
+ formerly regarded as hopelessly poor are now in a comparatively
+ flourishing condition. This fact has been officially recognised. In a
+ classification of the provinces according to their degree of prosperity,
+ drawn up by a special commission of experts in 1903, those with a poor
+ light soil appear at the top, and those with the famous black earth are at
+ the bottom of the list. In the deliberations of the commission many
+ reasons for this extraordinary state of things are adduced. Most of them
+ have merely a local significance. The big fact, taken as a whole, seems to
+ me to show that, in consequence of certain changes of which I shall speak
+ presently, the peasantry of European Russia can no longer live by the
+ traditional modes of agriculture, even in the most fertile districts, and
+ require for their support some subsidiary occupations such as are
+ practised in the less fertile provinces.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * In 1901 an additional famine grant of 33 1/2 million
+ roubles had to be made by the Government.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Another sign of impoverishment is the decrease in the quantity of live
+ stock. According to the very imperfect statistics available, for every
+ hundred inhabitants the number of horses has decreased from 26 to 17, the
+ number of cattle from 36 to 25, and the number of sheep from 73 to 40.
+ This is a serious matter, because it means that the land is not so well
+ manured and cultivated as formerly, and is consequently not so productive.
+ Several economists have attempted to fix precisely to what extent the
+ productivity has decreased, but I confess I have little faith in the
+ accuracy of their conclusions. M. Polenof, for example, a most able and
+ conscientious investigator, calculates that between 1861 and 1895, all
+ over Russia, the amount of food produced, in relation to the number of the
+ population, has decreased by seven per cent. His methods of calculation
+ are ingenious, but the statistical data with which he operates are so far
+ from accurate that his conclusions on this point have, in my opinion,
+ little or no scientific value. With all due deference to Russian
+ economists, I may say parenthetically that they are very found of juggling
+ with carelessly collected statistics, as if their data were mathematical
+ quantities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several of the Zemstvos have grappled with this question of peasant
+ impoverishment, and the data which they have collected make a very doleful
+ impression. In the province of Moscow, for example, a careful
+ investigation gave the following results: Forty per cent. of the peasant
+ households had no longer any horses, 15 per cent. had given up agriculture
+ altogether, and about 10 per cent. had no longer any land. We must not,
+ however, assume, as is often done, that the peasant families who have no
+ live stock and no longer till the land are utterly ruined. In reality many
+ of them are better off than their neighbours who appear as prosperous in
+ the official statistics, having found profitable occupation in the home
+ industries, in the towns, in the factories, or on the estates of the
+ landed proprietors. It must be remembered that Moscow is the centre of one
+ of the regions in which manufacturing industry has progressed with
+ gigantic strides during the last half-century, and it would be strange
+ indeed if, in such a region, the peasantry who supply the labour to the
+ towns and factories remained thriving agriculturists. That many Russians
+ are surprised and horrified at the actual state of things shows to what an
+ extent the educated classes are still under the illusion that Russia can
+ create for herself a manufacturing industry capable of competing with that
+ of Western Europe without uprooting from the soil a portion of her rural
+ population.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is only in the purely agricultural regions that families officially
+ classed as belonging to the peasantry may be regarded as on the brink of
+ pauperism because they have no live stock, and even with regard to them I
+ should hesitate to make such an assumption, because the muzhiks, as I have
+ already had occasion to remark, have strange nomadic habits unknown to the
+ rural population of other countries. It is a mistake, therefore, to
+ calculate the Russian peasant's budget exclusively on the basis of local
+ resources.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the pessimists who assure me that according to their calculations the
+ peasantry in general must be on the brink of starvation, I reply that
+ there are many facts, even in the statistical tables on which they rely,
+ which run counter to their deductions. Let me quote one by way of
+ illustration. The total amount of deposits in savings banks, about
+ one-fourth of which is believed to belong to the rural population, rose in
+ the course of six years (1894-1900) from 347 to 680 millions of roubles.
+ Besides the savings banks, there existed in the rural districts on 1st
+ December, 1902, no less than 1,614 small-credit institutions, with a total
+ capital (1st January, 1901) of 69 million roubles, of which only 4,653,000
+ had been advanced by the State Bank and the Zemstvo, the remainder coming
+ in from private sources. This is not much for a big country like Russia,
+ but it is a beginning, and it suggests that the impoverishment is not so
+ severe and so universal as the pessimists would have us believe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is thus room for differences of opinion as to how far the peasantry
+ have become impoverished, but there is no doubt that their condition is
+ far from satisfactory, and we have to face the important problem why the
+ abolition of serfage has not produced the beneficent consequences which
+ even moderate men so confidently predicted, and how the present
+ unsatisfactory state of things is to be remedied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most common explanation among those who have never seriously studied
+ the subject is that it all comes from the demoralisation of the common
+ people. In this view there is a modicum of truth. That the peasantry
+ injure their material welfare by drunkenness and improvidence there can be
+ no reasonable doubt, as is shown by the comparatively flourishing state of
+ certain villages of Old Ritualists and Molokanye in which there is no
+ drunkenness, and in which the community exercises a strong moral control
+ over the individual members. If the Orthodox Church could make the
+ peasantry refrain from the inordinate use of strong drink as effectually
+ as it makes them refrain during a great part of the year from animal food,
+ and if it could instil into their minds a few simple moral principles as
+ successfully as it has inspired them with a belief in the efficacy of the
+ Sacraments, it would certainly confer on them an inestimable benefit. But
+ this is not to be expected. The great majority of the parish priests are
+ quite unfit for such a task, and the few who have aspirations in that
+ direction rarely acquire a perceptible moral influence over their
+ parishioners. Perhaps more is to be expected from the schoolmaster than
+ from the priest, but it will be long before the schools can produce even a
+ partial moral regeneration. Their first influence, strange as the
+ assertion may seem, is often in a diametrically opposite direction. When
+ only a few peasants in a village can read and write they have such
+ facilities for overreaching their "dark" neighbours that they are apt to
+ employ their knowledge for dishonest purposes; and thus it occasionally
+ happens that the man who has the most education is the greatest scoundrel
+ in the Mir. Such facts are often used by the opponents of popular
+ education, but in reality they supply a good reason for disseminating
+ primary education as rapidly as possible. When all the peasants have
+ learned to read and write they will present a less inviting field for
+ swindling, and the temptations to dishonesty will be proportionately
+ diminished. Meanwhile, it is only fair to state that the common assertions
+ about drunkenness being greatly on the increase are not borne out by the
+ official statistics concerning the consumption of spirituous liquors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After drunkenness, the besetting sin which is supposed to explain the
+ impoverishment of the peasantry is incorrigible laziness. On that subject
+ I feel inclined to put in a plea of extenuating circumstances in favour of
+ the muzhik. Certainly he is very slow in his movements&mdash;slower
+ perhaps than the English rustic&mdash;and he has a marvellous capacity for
+ wasting valuable time without any perceptible qualms of conscience; but he
+ is in this respect, if I may use a favourite phrase of the Social
+ Scientists, "the product of environment." To the proprietors who
+ habitually reproach him with time-wasting he might reply with a very
+ strong tu quoque argument, and to all the other classes the argument might
+ likewise be addressed. The St. Petersburg official, for example, who
+ writes edifying disquisitions about peasant indolence, considers that for
+ himself attendance at his office for four hours, a large portion of which
+ is devoted to the unproductive labour of cigarette smoking, constitutes a
+ very fair day's work. The truth is that in Russia the struggle for life is
+ not nearly so intense as in more densely populated countries, and society
+ is so constituted that all can live without very strenuous exertion. The
+ Russians seem, therefore, to the traveller who comes from the West an
+ indolent, apathetic race. If the traveller happens to come from the East&mdash;especially
+ if he has been living among pastoral races&mdash;the Russians will appear
+ to him energetic and laborious. Their character in this respect
+ corresponds to their geographical position: they stand midway between the
+ laborious, painstaking, industrious population of Western Europe and the
+ indolent, undisciplined, spasmodically energetic populations of Central
+ Asia. They are capable of effecting much by vigorous, intermittent effort&mdash;witness
+ the peasant at harvest-time, or the St. Petersburg official when some big
+ legislative project has to be submitted to the Emperor within a given time&mdash;but
+ they have not yet learned regular laborious habits. In short, the Russians
+ might move the world if it could be done by a jerk, but they are still
+ deficient in that calm perseverance and dogged tenacity which characterise
+ the Teutonic race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without seeking further to determine how far the moral defects of the
+ peasantry have a deleterious influence on their material welfare, I
+ proceed to examine the external causes which are generally supposed to
+ contribute largely to their impoverishment, and will deal first with the
+ evils of peasant self-government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the peasant self-government is very far from being in a satisfactory
+ condition must be admitted by any impartial observer. The more laborious
+ and well-to-do peasants, unless they wish to abuse their position directly
+ or indirectly for their own advantage, try to escape election as
+ office-bearers, and leave the administration in the hands of the less
+ respectable members. Not unfrequently a Volost Elder trades with the money
+ he collects as dues or taxes; and sometimes, when he becomes insolvent,
+ the peasants have to pay their taxes and dues a second time. The Village
+ Assemblies, too, have become worse than they were in the days of serfage.
+ At that time the Heads of Households&mdash;who, it must be remembered,
+ have alone a voice in the decisions&mdash;were few in number, laborious,
+ and well-to-do, and they kept the lazy, unruly members under strict
+ control. Now that the large families have been broken up and almost every
+ adult peasant is Head of a Household, the Communal affairs are sometimes
+ decided by a noisy majority; and certain Communal decisions may be
+ obtained by "treating the Mir"&mdash;that is to say, by supplying a
+ certain amount of vodka. Often I have heard old peasants speak of these
+ things, and finish their recital by some such remark as this: "There is no
+ order now; the people have been spoiled; it was better in the time of the
+ masters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These evils are very real, and I have no desire to extenuate them, but I
+ believe they are by no means so great as is commonly supposed. If the
+ lazy, worthless members of the Commune had really the direction of
+ Communal affairs we should find that in the Northern Agricultural Zone,
+ where it is necessary to manure the soil, the periodical redistributions
+ of the Communal land would be very frequent; for in a new distribution the
+ lazy peasant has a good chance of getting a well-manured lot in exchange
+ for the lot which he has exhausted. In reality, so far as my observations
+ extend, these general distributions of the land are not more frequent than
+ they were before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the various functions of the peasant self-government the judicial are
+ perhaps the most frequently and the most severely criticised. And
+ certainly not without reason, for the Volost Courts are too often
+ accessible to the influence of alcohol, and in some districts the peasants
+ say that he who becomes a judge takes a sin on his soul. I am not at all
+ sure, however, that it would be well to abolish these courts altogether,
+ as some people propose. In many respects they are better suited to peasant
+ requirements than the ordinary tribunals. Their procedure is infinitely
+ simpler, more expeditious, and incomparably less expensive, and they are
+ guided by traditional custom and plain common-sense, whereas the ordinary
+ tribunals have to judge according to the civil law, which is unknown to
+ the peasantry and not always applicable to their affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Few ordinary judges have a sufficiently intimate knowledge of the minute
+ details of peasant life to be able to decide fairly the cases that are
+ brought before the Volost Courts; and even if a Justice had sufficient
+ knowledge he could not adopt the moral and juridical notions of the
+ peasantry. These are often very different from those of the upper classes.
+ In cases of matrimonial separation, for instance, the educated man
+ naturally assumes that, if there is any question of aliment, it should be
+ paid by the husband to the wife. The peasant, on the contrary, assumes as
+ naturally that it should be paid by the wife to the husband&mdash;or
+ rather to the Head of the Household&mdash;as a compensation for the loss
+ of labour which her desertion involves. In like manner, according to
+ traditional peasant-law, if an unmarried son is working away from home,
+ his earnings do not belong to himself, but to the family, and in Volost
+ Court they could be claimed by the Head of the Household.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Occasionally, it is true, the peasant judges allow their respect for old
+ traditional conceptions in general and for the authority of parents in
+ particular, to carry them a little too far. I was told lately of one
+ affair which took place not long ago, within a hundred miles of Moscow, in
+ which the judge decided that a respectable young peasant should be flogged
+ because he refused to give his father the money he earned as groom in the
+ service of a neighbouring proprietor, though it was notorious in the
+ district that the father was a disreputable old drunkard who carried to
+ the kabak (gin-shop) all the money he could obtain by fair means and foul.
+ When I remarked to my informant, who was not an admirer of peasant
+ institutions, that the incident reminded me of the respect for the patria
+ potestas in old Roman times, he stared at me with a look of surprise and
+ indignation, and exclaimed laconically, "Patria potestas? . . . Vodka!" He
+ was evidently convinced that the disreputable father had got his
+ respectable son flogged by "treating" the judges. In such cases flogging
+ can no longer be used, for the Volost Courts, as we have seen, were
+ recently deprived of the right to inflict corporal punishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These administrative and judicial abuses gradually reached the ears of the
+ Government, and in 1889 it attempted to remove them by creating a body of
+ Rural Supervisors (Zemskiye Natchalniki). Under their supervision and
+ control some abuses may have been occasionally prevented or corrected, and
+ some rascally Volost secretaries may have been punished or dismissed, but
+ the peasant self-government as a whole has not been perceptibly improved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us glance now at the opinions of those who hold that the material
+ progress of the peasantry is prevented chiefly, not by the mere abuses of
+ the Communal administration, but by the essential principles of the
+ Communal institutions, and especially by the practice of periodically
+ redistributing the Communal land. From the theoretical point of view this
+ question is one of great interest, and it may acquire in the future an
+ immense practical significance; but for the present it has not, in my
+ opinion, the importance which is usually attributed to it. There can be no
+ doubt that it is much more difficult to farm well on a large number of
+ narrow strips of land, many of which are at a great distance from the
+ farmyard, than on a compact piece of land which the farmer may divide and
+ cultivate as he pleases; and there can be as little doubt that the
+ husbandman is more likely to improve his land if his tenure is secure. All
+ this and much more of the same kind must be accepted as indisputable
+ truth, but it has little direct bearing on the practical question under
+ consideration. We are not considering in the abstract whether it would be
+ better that the peasant should be a farmer with abundant capital and all
+ the modern scientific appliances, but simply the practical question, What
+ are the obstructions which at present prevent the peasant from
+ ameliorating his actual condition?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the Commune prevents its members from adopting various systems of
+ high farming is a supposition which scarcely requires serious
+ consideration. The peasants do not yet think of any such radical
+ innovations; and if they did, they have neither the knowledge nor the
+ capital necessary to effect them. In many villages a few of the richer and
+ more intelligent peasants have bought land outside of the Commune and
+ cultivate it as they please, free from all Communal restraints; and I have
+ always found that they cultivate this property precisely in the same way
+ as their share of the Communal land. As to minor changes, we know by
+ experience that the Mir opposes to them no serious obstacles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cultivation of beet for the production of sugar has greatly increased
+ in the central and southwestern provinces, and flax is now largely
+ produced in Communes in northern districts where it was formerly
+ cultivated merely for domestic use. The Communal system is, in fact,
+ extremely elastic, and may be modified as soon as the majority of the
+ members consider modifications profitable. When the peasants begin to
+ think of permanent improvements, such as drainage, irrigation, and the
+ like, they will find the Communal institutions a help rather than an
+ obstruction; for such improvements, if undertaken at all, must be
+ undertaken on a larger scale, and the Mir is an already existing
+ association. The only permanent improvements which can be for the present
+ profitably undertaken consist in the reclaiming of waste land; and such
+ improvements are already sometimes attempted. I know at least of one case
+ in which a Commune in the province of Yaroslavl has reclaimed a
+ considerable tract of waste land by means of hired labourers. Nor does the
+ Mir prevent in this respect individual initiative. In many Communes of the
+ northern provinces it is a received principle of customary law that if any
+ member reclaims waste land he is allowed to retain possession of it for a
+ number of years proportionate to the amount of labour expended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But does not the Commune, as it exists, prevent good cultivation according
+ to the mode of agriculture actually in use?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Except in the far north and the steppe region, where the agriculture is of
+ a peculiar kind, adapted to the local conditions, the peasants invariably
+ till their land according to the ordinary three-field system, in which
+ good cultivation means, practically speaking, the plentiful use of manure.
+ Does, then, the existence of the Mir prevent the peasants from manuring
+ their fields well?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many people who speak on this subject in an authoritative tone seem to
+ imagine that the peasants in general do not manure their fields at all.
+ This idea is an utter mistake. In those regions, it is true, where the
+ rich black soil still retains a large part of its virgin fertility, the
+ manure is used as fuel, or simply thrown away, because the peasants
+ believe that it would not be profitable to put it on their fields, and
+ their conviction is, at least to some extent, well founded;* but in the
+ Northern Agricultural Zone, where unmanured soil gives almost no harvest,
+ the peasants put upon their fields all the manure they possess. If they do
+ not put enough it is simply because they have not sufficient live stock.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * As recently as two years ago (1903) I found that one of
+ the most intelligent and energetic landlords of the province
+ of Voronezh followed in this respect the example of the
+ peasants, and he assured me that he had proved by experience
+ the advantage of doing so.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It is only in the southern provinces, where no manure is required, that
+ periodical re-distributions take place frequently. As we travel northward
+ we find the term lengthens; and in the Northern Agricultural Zone, where
+ manure is indispensable, general re-distributions are extremely rare. In
+ the province of Yaroslavl, for example, the Communal land is generally
+ divided into two parts: the manured land lying near the village, and the
+ unmanured land lying beyond. The latter alone is subject to frequent
+ re-distribution. On the former the existing tenures are rarely disturbed,
+ and when it becomes necessary to give a share to a new household, the
+ change is effected with the least possible prejudice to vested rights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The policy of the Government has always been to admit redistributions in
+ principle, but to prevent their too frequent recurrence. For this purpose
+ the Emancipation Law stipulated that they could be decreed only by a
+ three-fourths majority of the Village Assembly, and in 1893 a further
+ obstacle was created by a law providing that the minimum term between two
+ re-distributions should be twelve years, and that they should never be
+ undertaken without the sanction of the Rural Supervisor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A certain number of Communes have made the experiment of transforming the
+ Communal tenure into hereditary allotments, and its only visible effect
+ has been that the allotments accumulate in the hands of the richer and
+ more enterprising peasants, and the poorer members of the Commune become
+ landless, while the primitive system of agriculture remains unimproved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up to this point I have dealt with the so-called causes of peasant
+ impoverishment which are much talked of, but which are, in my opinion,
+ only of secondary importance. I pass now to those which are more tangible
+ and which have exerted on the condition of the peasantry a more palpable
+ influence. And, first, inordinate taxation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is a very big subject, on which a bulky volume might be written, but
+ I shall cut it very short, because I know that the ordinary reader does
+ not like to be bothered with voluminous financial statistics. Briefly,
+ then, the peasant has to pay three kinds of direct taxation: Imperial to
+ the Central Government, local to the Zemstvo, and Commune to the Mir and
+ the Volost; and besides these he has to pay a yearly sum for the
+ redemption of the land-allotment which he received at the time of the
+ Emancipation. Taken together, these form a heavy burden, but for ten or
+ twelve years the emancipated peasantry bore it patiently, without falling
+ very deeply into arrears. Then began to appear symptoms of distress,
+ especially in the provinces with a poor soil, and in 1872 the Government
+ appointed a Commission of Inquiry, in which I had the privilege of taking
+ part unofficially. The inquiry showed that something ought to be done, but
+ at that moment the Government was so busy with administrative reforms and
+ with trying to develop industry and commerce that it had little time to
+ devote to studying and improving the economic position of the silent,
+ long-suffering muzhik. It was not till nearly ten years later, when the
+ Government began to feel the pinch of the ever-increasing arrears, that it
+ recognised the necessity of relieving the rural population. For this
+ purpose it abolished the salt-tax and the poll-tax and repeatedly lessened
+ the burden of the redemption-payments. At a later period (1899) it
+ afforded further relief by an important reform in the mode of collecting
+ the direct taxes. From the police, who often ruined peasant householders
+ by applying distraint indiscriminately, the collection of taxes was
+ transferred to special authorities who took into consideration the
+ temporary pecuniary embarrassments of the tax-payers. Another benefit
+ conferred on the peasantry by this reform is that an individual member of
+ the Commune is no longer responsible for the fiscal obligations of the
+ Commune as a whole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since these alleviations have been granted the annual total demanded from
+ the peasantry for direct taxation and land-redemption payments is 173
+ million roubles, and the average annual sum to be paid by each peasant
+ household varies, according to the locality, from 11 1/2 to 20 roubles
+ (21s. 6d. to 40s.). In addition to this annuity there is a heavy burden of
+ accumulated arrears, especially in the central and eastern provinces,
+ which amounted in 1899 to 143 millions. Of the indirect taxes I can say
+ nothing definite, because it is impossible to calculate, even
+ approximately, the share of them which falls on the rural population, but
+ they must not be left out of account. During the ten years of M. Witte's
+ term of office the revenue of the Imperial Treasury was nearly doubled,
+ and though the increase was due partly to improvements in the financial
+ administration, we can hardly believe that the peasantry did not in some
+ measure contribute to it. In any case, it is very difficult, if not
+ impossible, for them, under actual conditions, to improve their economic
+ position. On that point all Russian economists are agreed. One of the most
+ competent and sober-minded of them, M. Schwanebach, calculates that the
+ head of a peasant household, after deducting the grain required to feed
+ his family, has to pay into the Imperial Treasury, according to the
+ district in which he resides, from 25 to 100 per cent, of his agricultural
+ revenue. If that ingenious calculation is even approximately correct, we
+ must conclude that further financial reforms are urgently required,
+ especially in those provinces where the population live exclusively by
+ agriculture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heavy as the burden of taxation undoubtedly is, it might perhaps be borne
+ without very serious inconvenience if the peasant families could utilise
+ productively all their time and strength. Unfortunately in the existing
+ economic organisation a great deal of their time and energy is necessarily
+ wasted. Their economic life was radically dislocated by the Emancipation,
+ and they have not yet succeeded in reorganising it according to the new
+ conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the time of serfage an estate formed, from the economic point of view,
+ a co-operative agricultural association, under a manager who possessed
+ unlimited authority, and sometimes abused it, but who was generally
+ worldly-wise enough to understand that the prosperity of the whole
+ required the prosperity of the component parts. By the abolition of
+ serfage the association was dissolved and liquidated, and the strong,
+ compact whole fell into a heap of independent units, with separate and
+ often mutually hostile interests. Some of the disadvantages of this change
+ for the peasantry I have already enumerated above. The most important I
+ have now to mention. In virtue of the Emancipation Law each family
+ received an amount of land which tempted it to continue farming on its own
+ account, but which did not enable it to earn a living and pay its rates
+ and taxes. The peasant thus became a kind of amphibious creature&mdash;half
+ farmer and half something else&mdash;cultivating his allotment for a
+ portion of his daily bread, and obliged to have some other occupation
+ wherewith to cover the inevitable deficit in his domestic budget. If he
+ was fortunate enough to find near his home a bit of land to be let at a
+ reasonable rent, he might cultivate it in addition to his own and thereby
+ gain a livelihood; but if he had not the good luck to find such a piece of
+ land in the immediate neighbourhood, he had to look for some subsidiary
+ occupation in which to employ his leisure time; and where was such
+ occupation to be found in an ordinary Russian village? In former years he
+ might have employed himself perhaps in carting the proprietor's grain to
+ distant markets or still more distant seaports, but that means of making a
+ little money has been destroyed by the extension of railways. Practically,
+ then, he is now obliged to choose between two alternatives: either to farm
+ his allotment and spend a great part of the year in idleness, or to leave
+ the cultivation of his allotment to his wife and children and to seek
+ employment elsewhere&mdash;often at such a distance that his earnings
+ hardly cover the expenses of the journey. In either case much time and
+ energy are wasted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evil results of this state of things were intensified by another
+ change which was brought about by the Emancipation. In the time of serfage
+ the peasant families, as I have already remarked, were usually very large.
+ They remained undivided, partly from the influence of patriarchal
+ conceptions, but chiefly because the proprietors, recognising the
+ advantage of large units, prevented them from breaking up. As soon as the
+ proprietor's authority was removed, the process of disintegration began
+ and spread rapidly. Every one wished to be independent, and in a very
+ short time nearly every able-bodied married peasant had a house of his
+ own. The economic consequences were disastrous. A large amount of money
+ had to be expended in constructing new houses and farmsteadings; and the
+ old habit of one male member remaining at home to cultivate the land
+ allotment with the female members of the family whilst the others went to
+ earn wages elsewhere had to be abandoned. Many large families, which had
+ been prosperous and comfortable&mdash;rich according to peasant
+ conceptions&mdash;dissolved into three or four small ones, all on the
+ brink of pauperism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last cause of peasant impoverishment that I have to mention is perhaps
+ the most important of all: I mean the natural increase of population
+ without a corresponding increase in the means of subsistence. Since the
+ Emancipation in 1861 the population has nearly doubled, whilst the amount
+ of Communal land has remained the same. It is not surprising, therefore,
+ that when talking with peasants about their actual condition, one
+ constantly hears the despairing cry, "Zemli malo!" ("There is not enough
+ land"); and one notices that those who look a little ahead ask anxiously:
+ "What is to become of our children? Already the Communal allotment is too
+ small for our wants, and the land outside is doubling and trebling in
+ price! What will it be in the future?" At the same time, not a few Russian
+ economists tell us&mdash;and their apprehensions are shared by foreign
+ observers&mdash;that millions of peasants are in danger of starvation in
+ the near future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Must we, then, accept for Russia the Malthus doctrine that population
+ increases more rapidly than the means of subsistence, and that starvation
+ can be avoided only by plague, pestilence, war, and other destructive
+ forces? I think not. It is quite true that, if the amount of land actually
+ possessed by the peasantry and the present system of cultivating it
+ remained unchanged, semi-starvation would be the inevitable result within
+ a comparatively short space of time; but the danger can be averted, and
+ the proper remedies are not far to seek. If Russia is suffering from
+ over-population, it must be her own fault, for she is, with the exception
+ of Norway and Sweden, the most thinly populated country in Europe, and she
+ has more than her share of fertile soil and mineral resources.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A glance at the map showing the density of population in the various
+ provinces suggests an obvious remedy, and I am happy to say it is already
+ being applied. The population of the congested districts of the centre is
+ gradually spreading out, like a drop of oil on a sheet of soft paper,
+ towards the more thinly populated regions of the south and east. In this
+ way the vast region containing millions and millions of acres which lies
+ to the north of the Black Sea, the Caucasus, the Caspian, and Central Asia
+ is yearly becoming more densely peopled, and agriculture is steadily
+ encroaching on the pastoral area. Breeders of sheep and cattle, who
+ formerly lived and throve in the western portion of that great expanse,
+ are being pushed eastwards by the rapid increase in the value of land, and
+ their place is being taken by enterprising tillers of the soil. Further
+ north another stream of emigration is flowing into Central Siberia. It
+ does not flow so rapidly, because in that part of the Empire, unlike the
+ bare, fertile steppes of the south, the land has to be cleared before the
+ seed can be sown, and the pioneer colonists have to work hard for a year
+ or two before they get any return for their labour; but the Government and
+ private societies come to their assistance, and for the last twenty years
+ their numbers have been steadily increasing. During the ten years 1886-96
+ the annual contingent rose from 25,000 to 200,000, and the total number
+ amounted to nearly 800,000. For the subsequent period I have not been able
+ to obtain the official statistics, but a friend who has access to the
+ official sources of information on this subject assures me that during the
+ last twelve years about four millions of peasants from European Russia
+ have been successfully settled in Siberia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even in the European portion of the Empire millions of acres which are at
+ present unproductive might be utilised. Any one who has travelled by rail
+ from Berlin to St. Petersburg must have noticed how the landscape suddenly
+ changes its character as soon as he has crossed the frontier. Leaving a
+ prosperous agricultural country, he traverses for many weary hours a
+ region in which there is hardly a sign of human habitation, though the
+ soil and climate of that region resembles closely the soil and climate of
+ East Prussia. The difference lies in the amount of labour and capital
+ expended. According to official statistics the area of European Russia
+ contains, roughly speaking, 406 millions of dessyatins, of which 78
+ millions, or 19 per cent., are classified as neudobniya, unfit for
+ cultivation; 157 millions, or 39 per cent., as forest; 106 millions, or 26
+ per cent., as arable land; and 65 millions, or 16 per cent., as pasturage.
+ Thus the arable and pasture land compose only 42 per cent., or
+ considerably less than half the area.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the land classed as unfit for cultivation&mdash;19 per cent. of the
+ whole&mdash;a large portion, including the perennially frozen tundri of
+ the far north, must ever remain unproductive, but in latitudes with a
+ milder climate this category of land is for the most part ordinary morass
+ or swamp, which can be transformed into pasturage, or even into arable
+ land, by drainage at a moderate cost. As a proof of this statement I may
+ cite the draining of the great Pinsk swamps, which was begun by the
+ Government in 1872. If we may trust an official report of the progress of
+ the works in 1897, an area of 2,855,000 dessyatins (more than seven and a
+ half million acres) had been drained at an average cost of about three
+ shillings an acre, and the price of land had risen from four to
+ twenty-eight roubles per dessyatin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reclamation of marshes might be undertaken elsewhere on a much more
+ moderate scale. The observant traveller on the highways and byways of the
+ northern provinces must have noticed on the banks of almost every stream
+ many acres of marshy land producing merely reeds or coarse rank grass that
+ no well-brought-up animal would look at. With a little elementary
+ knowledge of engineering and the expenditure of a moderate amount of
+ manual labour these marshes might be converted into excellent pasture or
+ even into highly productive kitchen-gardens; but the peasants have not yet
+ learned to take advantage of such opportunities, and the reformers, who
+ deal only in large projects and scientific panaceas for the cure of
+ impoverishment, consider such trifles as unworthy of their attention. The
+ Scotch proverb that if the pennies be well looked after, the pounds will
+ look after themselves, contains a bit of homely wisdom totally unknown to
+ the Russian educated classes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the morasses, swamps, and marshes come the forests, constituting 39
+ per cent. of the whole area, and the question naturally arises whether
+ some portions of them might not be advantageously transformed into
+ pasturage or arable land. In the south and east they have been diminished
+ to such an extent as to affect the climate injuriously, so that the area
+ of them should be increased rather than lessened; but in the northern
+ provinces the vast expanses of forest, covering millions of acres, might
+ perhaps be curtailed with advantage. The proprietors prefer, however, to
+ keep them in their present condition because they give a modest revenue
+ without any expenditure of capital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therein lies the great obstacle to land-reclamation in Russia: it requires
+ an outlay of capital, and capital is extremely scarce in the Empire of the
+ Tsars. Until it becomes more plentiful, the area of arable land and
+ pasturage is not likely to be largely increased, and other means of
+ checking the impoverishment of the peasantry must be adopted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A less expensive means is suggested by the statistics of foreign trade. In
+ the preceding chapter we have seen that from 1860 to 1900 the average
+ annual export of grain rose steadily from under 1 1/2 millions to over 6
+ millions of tons. It is evident, therefore, that in the food supply, so
+ far from there being a deficiency, there has been a large and constantly
+ increasing surplus. If the peasantry have been on short rations, it is not
+ because the quantity of food produced has fallen short of the requirements
+ of the population, but because it has been unequally distributed. The
+ truth is that the large landed proprietors produce more and the peasants
+ less than they consume, and it has naturally occurred to many people that
+ the present state of things might be improved if a portion of the arable
+ land passed, without any socialistic, revolutionary measures, from the one
+ class to the other. This operation began spontaneously soon after the
+ Emancipation. Well-to-do peasants who had saved a little money bought from
+ the proprietors bits of land near their villages and cultivated them in
+ addition to their allotments. At first this extension of peasant land was
+ confined within very narrow limits, because the peasants had very little
+ capital at their disposal, but in 1882 the Government came to their aid by
+ creating the Peasant Land Bank, the object of which was to advance money
+ to purchasers of the peasant class on the security of the land purchased,
+ at the rate of 7 1/2 per cent., including sinking fund.* From that moment
+ the purchases increased rapidly. They were made by individual peasants, by
+ rural Communes, and, most of all, by small voluntary associations composed
+ of three, four, or more members. In the course of twenty years (1883-1903)
+ the Bank made 47,791 advances, and in this way were purchased about
+ eighteen million acres. This sounds a very big acquisition, but it will
+ not do much to relieve the pressure on the peasantry as a whole, because
+ it adds only about 6 per cent. to the amount they already possessed in
+ virtue of the Emancipation Law.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This arrangement extinguishes the debt in 34 1/2 years; an
+ additional 1 per cent, extinguishes it in 24 1/2 years. By
+ recent legislation other arrangements are permitted.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Nearly all of this land purchased by the peasantry comes directly or
+ indirectly from the Noblesse, and much more will doubtless pass from the
+ one class to the other if the Government continues to encourage the
+ operation; but already symptoms of a change of policy are apparent. In the
+ higher official regions it is whispered that the existing policy is
+ objectionable from the political point of view, and one sometimes hears
+ the question asked: Is it right and desirable that the Noblesse, who have
+ ever done their duty in serving faithfully the Tsar and Fatherland, and
+ who have ever been the representatives of civilisation and culture in
+ Russian country life, should be gradually expropriated in favour of other
+ and less cultivated social classes? Not a few influential personages are
+ of opinion that such a change is unjust and undesirable, and they argue
+ that it is not advantageous to the peasants themselves, because the price
+ of land has risen much more than the rents. It is not at all uncommon, for
+ example, to find that land can be rented at five roubles per dessyatin,
+ whereas it cannot be bought under 200 roubles. In that case the peasant
+ can enjoy the use of the land at the moderate rate of 2 1/2 per cent. of
+ the capital value, whereas by purchasing the land with the assistance of
+ the bank he would have to pay, without sinking fund, more than double that
+ rate. The muzhik, however, prefers to be owner of the land, even at a
+ considerable sacrifice. When he can be induced to give his reasons, they
+ are usually formulated thus: "With my own land I can do as I like; if I
+ hire land from the neighbouring proprietor, who knows whether, at the end
+ of the term, he may not raise the rent or refuse to renew the contract at
+ any price?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even if the Government should continue to encourage the purchase of land
+ by the peasantry, the process is too slow to meet all the requirements of
+ the situation. Some additional expedient must be found, and we naturally
+ look for it in the experience of older countries with a denser population.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the more densely populated countries of Western Europe a safety-valve
+ for the inordinate increase of the rural population has been provided by
+ the development of manufacturing industry. High wages and the attractions
+ of town life draw the rural population to the industrial centres, and the
+ movement has increased to such an extent that already complaints are heard
+ of the rural districts becoming depopulated. In Russia a similar movement
+ is taking place on a smaller scale. During the last forty years, under the
+ fostering influence of a protective tariff, the manufacturing industry has
+ made gigantic strides, as we shall see in a future chapter, and it has
+ already absorbed about two millions of the redundant hands in the
+ villages; but it cannot keep pace with the rapid increasing surplus. Two
+ millions are less than two per cent. of the population. The great mass of
+ the people has always been, and must long continue to be, purely
+ agricultural; and it is to their fields that they must look for the means
+ of subsistence. If the fields do not supply enough for their support under
+ the existing primitive methods of cultivation, better methods must be
+ adopted. To use a favourite semi-scientific phrase, Russia has now reached
+ the point in her economic development at which she must abandon her
+ traditional extensive system of agriculture and adopt a more intensive
+ system. So far all competent authorities are agreed. But how is the
+ transition, which requires technical knowledge, a spirit of enterprise, an
+ enormous capital, and a dozen other things which the peasantry do not at
+ present possess, to be effected? Here begin the well-marked differences of
+ opinion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hitherto the momentous problem has been dealt with chiefly by the
+ theorists and doctrinaires who delight in radical solutions by means of
+ panaceas, and who have little taste for detailed local investigation and
+ gradual improvement. I do not refer to the so-called "Saviours of the
+ Fatherland" (Spasiteli Otetchestva), well-meaning cranks and visionaries
+ who discover ingenious devices for making their native country at once
+ prosperous and happy. I speak of the great majority of reasonable,
+ educated men who devote some attention to the problem. Their favourite
+ method of dealing with it is this: The intensive system of agriculture
+ requires scientific knowledge and a higher level of intellectual culture.
+ What has to be done, therefore, is to create agricultural colleges
+ supplied with all the newest appliances of agronomic research and to
+ educate the peasantry to such an extent that they may be able to use the
+ means which science recommends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For many years this doctrine prevailed in the Press, among the reading
+ public, and even in the official world. The Government was accordingly
+ urged to improve and multiply the agronomic colleges and the schools of
+ all grades and descriptions. Learned dissertations were published on the
+ chemical constitution of the various soils, the action of the atmosphere
+ on the different ingredients, the necessity of making careful
+ meteorological observations, and numerous other topics of a similar kind;
+ and would-be reformers who had no taste for such highly technical
+ researches could console themselves with the idea that they were advancing
+ the vital interests of the country by discussing the relative merits of
+ Communal and personal land-tenure&mdash;deciding generally in favour of
+ the former as more in accordance with the peculiarities of Russian, as
+ contrasted with West European, principles of economic and social
+ development.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While much valuable time and energy were thus being expended to little
+ purpose, on the assumption that the old system might be left untouched
+ until the preparations for a radical solution had been completed,
+ disagreeable facts which could not be entirely overlooked gradually
+ produced in influential quarters the conviction that the question was much
+ more urgent than was commonly supposed. A sensitive chord in the heart of
+ the Government was struck by the steadily increasing arrears of taxation,
+ and spasmodic attempts have since been made to cure the evil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the local administration, too, the urgency of the question has come to
+ be recognised, and measures are now being taken by the Zemstvo to help the
+ peasantry in making gradually the transition to that higher system of
+ agriculture which is the only means of permanently saving them from
+ starvation. For this purpose, in many districts well-trained specialists
+ have been appointed to study the local conditions and to recommend to the
+ villagers such simple improvements as are within their means. These
+ improvements may be classified under the following heads:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (1) Increase of the cereal crops by better seed and improved implements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (2) Change in the rotation of crops by the introduction of certain grasses
+ and roots which improve the soil and supply food for live stock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (3) Improvement and increase of live stock, so as to get more
+ labour-power, more manure, more dairy-produce, and more meat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (4) Increased cultivation of vegetables and fruit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these objects in view the Zemstvo is establishing depots in which
+ improved implements and better seed are sold at moderate prices, and the
+ payments are made in installments, so that even the poorer members of the
+ community can take advantage of the facilities offered. Bulls and
+ stallions are kept at central points for the purpose of improving the
+ breed of cattle and horses, and the good results are already visible.
+ Elementary instruction in farming and gardening is being introduced into
+ the primary schools. In some districts the exertions of the Zemstvo are
+ supplemented by small agricultural societies, mutual credit associations,
+ and village banks, and these are to some extent assisted by the Central
+ Government. But the beneficent action in this direction is not all
+ official. Many proprietors deserve great praise for the good influence
+ which they exercise on the peasants of their neighbourhood and the
+ assistance they give them; and it must be admitted that their patience is
+ often sorely tried, for the peasants have the obstinacy of ignorance, and
+ possess other qualities which are not sympathetic. I know one excellent
+ proprietor who began his civilising efforts by giving to the Mir of the
+ nearest village an iron plough as a model and a fine pedigree ram as a
+ producer, and who found, on returning from a tour abroad, that during his
+ absence the plough had been sold for vodka, and the pedigree ram had been
+ eaten before it had time to produce any descendants! In spite of this he
+ continues his efforts, and not altogether without success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It need hardly be said that the progress of the peasantry is not so rapid
+ as could be wished. The muzhik is naturally conservative, and is ever
+ inclined to regard novelties with suspicion. Even when he is half
+ convinced of the utility of some change, he has still to think about it
+ for a long time and talk it over again and again with his friends and
+ neighbours, and this preparatory stage of progress may last for years.
+ Unless he happens to be a man of unusual intelligence and energy, it is
+ only when he sees with his own eyes that some humble individual of his own
+ condition in life has actually gained by abandoning the old routine and
+ taking to new courses, that he makes up his mind to take the plunge
+ himself. Still, he is beginning to jog on. E pur si muove! A spirit of
+ progress is beginning to move on the face of the long-stagnant waters, and
+ progress once begun is pretty sure to continue with increasing rapidity.
+ With starvation hovering in the rear, even the most conservative are not
+ likely to stop or turn back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0032" id="link2HCH0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE ZEMSTVO AND THE LOCAL SELF-GOVERNMENT
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Necessity of Reorganising the Provincial Administration&mdash;Zemstvo
+ Created in 1864&mdash;My First Acquaintance with the Institution&mdash;District
+ and Provincial Assemblies&mdash;The Leading Members&mdash;Great
+ Expectations Created by the Institution&mdash;These Expectations Not
+ Realised&mdash;Suspicions and Hostility of the Bureaucracy&mdash;Zemstvo
+ Brought More Under Control of the Centralised Administration&mdash;What It
+ Has Really Done&mdash;Why It Has Not Done More&mdash;-Rapid Increase of
+ the Rates&mdash;How Far the Expenditure Is Judicious&mdash;Why the
+ Impoverishment of the Peasantry Was Neglected&mdash;Unpractical, Pedantic
+ Spirit&mdash;Evil Consequences&mdash;Chinese and Russian Formalism&mdash;Local
+ Self-Government of Russia Contrasted with That of England&mdash;Zemstvo
+ Better than Its Predecessors&mdash;Its Future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the emancipation of the serfs the reform most urgently required was
+ the improvement of the provincial administration. In the time of serfage
+ the Emperor Nicholas, referring to the landed proprietors, used to say in
+ a jocular tone that he had in his Empire 50,000 most zealous and efficient
+ hereditary police-masters. By the Emancipation Law the authority of these
+ hereditary police-masters was for ever abolished, and it became urgently
+ necessary to put something else in its place. Peasant self-government was
+ accordingly organised on the basis of the rural Commune; but it fell far
+ short of meeting the requirements of the situation. Its largest unit was
+ the Volost, which comprises merely a few contiguous Communes, and its
+ action is confined exclusively to the peasantry. Evidently it was
+ necessary to create a larger administrative unit, in which the interests
+ of all classes of the population could be attended to, and for this
+ purpose Alexander II. in November, 1859, more than a year before the
+ Emancipation Edict, instructed a special Commission to prepare a project
+ for giving to the inefficient, dislocated provincial administration
+ greater unity and independence. The project was duly prepared, and after
+ being discussed in the Council of State it received the Imperial sanction
+ in January, 1864. It was supposed to give, in the words of an explanatory
+ memorandum attached to it, "as far as possible a complete and logical
+ development to the principle of local self-government." Thus was created
+ the Zemstvo,* which has recently attracted considerable attention in
+ Western Europe, and which is destined, perhaps, to play a great political
+ part in the future.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The term Zemstvo is derived from the word Zemlya, meaning
+ land, and might be translated, if a barbarism were
+ permissible, by Land-dom on the analogy of Kingdom, Dukedom,
+ etc.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ My personal acquaintance with this interesting institution dates from
+ 1870. Very soon after my arrival at Novgorod in that year, I made the
+ acquaintance of a gentleman who was described to me as "the president of
+ the provincial Zemstvo-bureau," and finding him amiable and communicative,
+ I suggested that he might give me some information regarding the
+ institution of which he was the chief local representative. With the
+ utmost readiness he proposed to be my Mentor, introduced me to his
+ colleagues, and invited me to come and see him at his office as often as I
+ felt inclined. Of this invitation I made abundant use. At first my visits
+ were discreetly few and short, but when I found that my new friend and his
+ colleagues really wished to instruct me in all the details of Zemstvo
+ administration, and had arranged a special table in the president's room
+ for my convenience, I became a regular attendant, and spent daily several
+ hours in the bureau, studying the current affairs, and noting down the
+ interesting bits of statistical and other information which came before
+ the members, as if I had been one of their number. When they went to
+ inspect the hospital, the lunatic asylum, the seminary for the preparation
+ of village schoolmasters, or any other Zemstvo institution, they
+ invariably invited me to accompany them, and made no attempt to conceal
+ from me the defects which they happened to discover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I mention all this because it illustrates the readiness of most Russians
+ to afford every possible facility to a foreigner who wishes seriously to
+ study their country. They believe that they have long been misunderstood
+ and systematically calumniated by foreigners, and they are extremely
+ desirous that the prevalent misconceptions regarding their country should
+ be removed. It must be said to their honour that they have little or none
+ of that false patriotism which seeks to conceal national defects; and in
+ judging themselves and their institutions they are inclined to be
+ over-severe rather than unduly lenient. In the time of Nicholas I. those
+ who desired to stand well with the Government proclaimed loudly that they
+ lived in the happiest and best-governed country of the world, but this
+ shallow official optimism has long since gone out of fashion. During all
+ the years which I spent in Russia I found everywhere the utmost readiness
+ to assist me in my investigations, and very rarely noticed that habit of
+ "throwing dust in the eyes of foreigners," of which some writers have
+ spoken so much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Zemstvo is a kind of local administration which supplements the action
+ of the rural Communes, and takes cognizance of those higher public wants
+ which individual Communes cannot possibly satisfy. Its principal duties
+ are to keep the roads and bridges in proper repair, to provide means of
+ conveyance for the rural police and other officials, to look after primary
+ education and sanitary affairs, to watch the state of the crops and take
+ measures against approaching famine, and, in short, to undertake, within
+ certain clearly defined limits, whatever seems likely to increase the
+ material and moral well-being of the population. In form the institution
+ is Parliamentary&mdash;that is to say, it consists of an assembly of
+ deputies which meets regularly once a year, and of a permanent executive
+ bureau elected by the Assembly from among its members. If the Assembly be
+ regarded as a local Parliament, the bureau corresponds to the Cabinet. In
+ accordance with this analogy my friend the president was sometimes
+ jocularly termed the Prime Minister. Once every three years the deputies
+ are elected in certain fixed proportions by the landed proprietors, the
+ rural Communes, and the municipal corporations. Every province (guberniya)
+ and each of the districts (uyezdi) into which the province is subdivided
+ has such an assembly and such a bureau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not long after my arrival in Novgorod I had the opportunity of being
+ present at a District Assembly. In the ball-room of the "Club de la
+ Noblesse" I found thirty or forty men seated round a long table covered
+ with green cloth. Before each member lay sheets of paper for the purpose
+ of taking notes, and before the president&mdash;the Marshal of Noblesse
+ for the district&mdash;stood a small hand-bell, which he rang vigorously
+ at the commencement of the proceedings and on all the occasions when he
+ wished to obtain silence. To the right and left of the president sat the
+ members of the executive bureau (uprava), armed with piles of written and
+ printed documents, from which they read long and tedious extracts, till
+ the majority of the audience took to yawning and one or two of the members
+ positively went to sleep. At the close of each of these reports the
+ president rang his bell&mdash;presumably for the purpose of awakening the
+ sleepers&mdash;and inquired whether any one had remarks to make on what
+ had just been read. Generally some one had remarks to make, and not
+ unfrequently a discussion ensued. When any decided difference of opinion
+ appeared a vote was taken by handing round a sheet of paper, or by the
+ simpler method of requesting the Ayes to stand up and the Noes to sit
+ still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What surprised me most in this assembly was that it was composed partly of
+ nobles and partly of peasants&mdash;the latter being decidedly in the
+ majority&mdash;and that no trace of antagonism seemed to exist between the
+ two classes. Landed proprietors and their ci-devant serfs, emancipated
+ only ten years before, evidently met for the moment on a footing of
+ equality. The discussions were carried on chiefly by the nobles, but on
+ more than one occasion peasant members rose to speak, and their remarks,
+ always clear, practical, and to the point, were invariably listened to
+ with respectful attention. Instead of that violent antagonism which might
+ have been expected, considering the constitution of the Assembly, there
+ was too much unanimity&mdash;a fact indicating plainly that the majority
+ of the members did not take a very deep interest in the matters presented
+ to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This assembly was held in the month of September. At the beginning of
+ December the Assembly for the Province met, and during nearly three weeks
+ I was daily present at its deliberations. In general character and mode of
+ procedure it resembled closely the District Assembly. Its chief
+ peculiarities were that its members were chosen, not by the primary
+ electors, but by the assemblies of the ten districts which compose the
+ province, and that it took cognisance merely of those matters which
+ concerned more than one district. Besides this, the peasant deputies were
+ very few in number&mdash;a fact which somewhat surprised me, because I was
+ aware that, according to the law, the peasant members of the District
+ Assemblies were eligible, like those of the other classes. The explanation
+ is that the District Assemblies choose their most active members to
+ represent them in the Provincial Assemblies, and consequently the choice
+ generally falls on landed proprietors. To this arrangement the peasants
+ make no objection, for attendance at the Provincial Assemblies demands a
+ considerable pecuniary outlay, and payment to the deputies is expressly
+ prohibited by law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To give the reader an idea of the elements composing this assembly, let me
+ introduce him to a few of the members. A considerable section of them may
+ be described in a single sentence. They are commonplace men, who have
+ spent part of their youth in the public service as officers in the army,
+ or officials in the civil administration, and have since retired to their
+ estates, where they gain a modest competence by farming. Some of them add
+ to their agricultural revenue by acting as justices of the peace.* A few
+ may be described more particularly.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * That is no longer possible. The institution of justices
+ elected and paid by the Zemstvo was abolished in 1889.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ You see there, for instance, that fine-looking old general in uniform,
+ with the St. George's Cross at his button-hole&mdash;an order given only
+ for bravery in the field. That is Prince Suvorof, a grandson of the famous
+ general. He has filled high posts in the Administration without ever
+ tarnishing his name by a dishonest or dishonourable action, and has spent
+ a great part of his life at Court without ceasing to be frank, generous,
+ and truthful. Though he has no intimate knowledge of current affairs, and
+ sometimes gives way a little to drowsiness, his sympathies in disputed
+ points are always on the right side, and when he gets to his feet he
+ always speaks in a clear soldierlike fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tall gaunt man, somewhat over middle age, who sits a little to the
+ left is Prince Vassiltchikof. He too, has an historic name, but he
+ cherishes above all things personal independence, and has consequently
+ always kept aloof from the Imperial Administration and the Court. The
+ leisure thus acquired he has devoted to study, and he has produced several
+ valuable works on political and social science. An enthusiastic but at the
+ same time cool-headed abolitionist at the time of the Emancipation, he has
+ since constantly striven to ameliorate the condition of the peasantry by
+ advocating the spread of primary education, the rural credit associations
+ in the village, the preservation of the Communal institutions, and
+ numerous important reforms in the financial system. Both of these
+ gentlemen, it is said, generously gave to their peasants more land than
+ they were obliged to give by the Emancipation Law. In the Assembly Prince
+ Vassiltchikof speaks frequently, and always commands attention; and in all
+ important committees he is leading member. Though a warm defender of the
+ Zemstvo institutions, he thinks that their activity ought to be confined
+ to a comparatively narrow field, and he thereby differs from some of his
+ colleagues, who are ready to embark in hazardous, not to say fanciful,
+ schemes for developing the natural resources of the province. His
+ neighbour, Mr. P&mdash;&mdash;, is one of the ablest and most energetic
+ members of the Assembly. He is president of the executive bureau in one of
+ the districts, where he has founded many primary schools and created
+ several rural credit associations on the model of those which bear the
+ name of Schultze Delitsch in Germany. Mr. S&mdash;&mdash;, who sits beside
+ him, was for some years an arbiter between the proprietors and emancipated
+ serfs, then a member of the Provincial Executive Bureau, and is now
+ director of a bank in St. Petersburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the right and left of the president&mdash;who is Marshal of Noblesse
+ for the province&mdash;sit the members of the bureau. The gentleman who
+ reads the long reports is my friend "the Prime Minister," who began life
+ as a cavalry officer, and after a few years of military service retired to
+ his estate; he is an intelligent, able administrator, and a man of
+ considerable literary culture. His colleague, who assists him in reading
+ the reports, is a merchant, and director of the municipal bank. The next
+ member is also a merchant, and in some respects the most remarkable man in
+ the room. Though born a serf, he is already, at middle age, an important
+ personage in the Russian commercial world. Rumour says that he laid the
+ foundation of his fortune by one day purchasing a copper cauldron in a
+ village through which he was passing on his way to St. Petersburg, where
+ he hoped to gain a little money by the sale of some calves. In the course
+ of a few years he amassed an enormous fortune; but cautious people think
+ that he is too fond of hazardous speculations, and prophesy that he will
+ end life as poor as he began it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these men belong to what may be called the party of progress, which
+ anxiously supports all proposals recognised as "liberal," and especially
+ all measures likely to improve the condition of the peasantry. Their chief
+ opponent is that little man with close-cropped, bullet-shaped head and
+ small piercing eyes, who may be called the Leader of the opposition. He
+ condemns many of the proposed schemes, on the ground that the province is
+ already overtaxed, and that the expenditure ought to be reduced to the
+ smallest possible figure. In the District Assembly he preaches this
+ doctrine with considerable success, for there the peasantry form the
+ majority, and he knows how to use that terse, homely language,
+ interspersed with proverbs, which has far more influence on the rustic
+ mind than scientific principles and logical reasoning; but here, in
+ Provincial Assembly, his following composes only a respectable minority,
+ and he confines himself to a policy of obstruction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Zemstvo of Novgorod had at that time the reputation of being one of
+ the most enlightened and energetic, and I must say that the proceedings
+ were conducted in a business-like, satisfactory way. The reports were
+ carefully considered, and each article of the annual budget was submitted
+ to minute scrutiny and criticism. In several of the provinces which I
+ afterwards visited I found that affairs were conducted in a very different
+ fashion: quorums were formed with extreme difficulty, and the proceedings,
+ when they at last commenced, were treated as mere formalities and
+ despatched as speedily as possible. The character of the Assembly depends
+ of course on the amount of interest taken in local public affairs. In some
+ districts this interest is considerable; in others it is very near zero.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The birth of this new institution was hailed with enthusiasm, and produced
+ great expectations. At that time a large section of the Russian educated
+ classes had a simple, convenient criterion for institutions of all kinds.
+ They assumed as a self-evident axiom that the excellence of an institution
+ must always be in proportion to its "liberal" and democratic character.
+ The question as to how far it might be appropriate to the existing
+ conditions and to the character of the people, and as to whether it might
+ not, though admirable in itself, be too expensive for the work to be
+ performed, was little thought of. Any organisation which rested on "the
+ elective principle," and provided an arena for free public discussion, was
+ sure to be well received, and these conditions were fulfilled by the
+ Zemstvo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The expectations excited were of various kinds. People who thought more of
+ political than economic progress saw in the Zemstvo the basis of boundless
+ popular liberty. Prince Yassiltchikof, for example, though naturally of a
+ phlegmatic temperament, became for a moment enthusiastic, and penned the
+ following words: "With a daring unparalleled in the chronicles of the
+ world, we have entered on the career of public life." If local
+ self-government in England had, in spite of its aristocratic character,
+ created and preserved political liberty, as had been proved by several
+ learned Germans, what might be expected from institutions so much more
+ liberal and democratic? In England there had never been county
+ parliaments, and the local administration had always been in the hands of
+ the great land-owners; whilst in Russia every district would have its
+ elective assembly, in which the peasant would be on a level with the
+ richest landed proprietors. People who were accustomed to think of social
+ rather than political progress expected that they would soon see the
+ country provided with good roads, safe bridges, numerous village schools,
+ well-appointed hospitals, and all the other requisites of civilisation.
+ Agriculture would become more scientific, trade and industry would be
+ rapidly developed, and the material, intellectual, and moral condition of
+ the peasantry would be enormously improved. The listless apathy of
+ provincial life and the hereditary indifference to local public affairs
+ were now, it was thought, about to be dispelled; and in view of this
+ change, patriotic mothers took their children to the annual assemblies in
+ order to accustom them from their early years to take an interest in the
+ public welfare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is hardly necessary to say that these inordinate expectations were not
+ realised. From the very beginning there had been a misunderstanding
+ regarding the character and functions of the new institutions. During the
+ short period of universal enthusiasm for reform the great officials had
+ used incautiously some of the vague liberal phrases then in fashion, but
+ they never seriously intended to confer on the child which they were
+ bringing into the world a share in the general government of the country;
+ and the rapid evaporation of their sentimental liberalism, which began as
+ soon as they undertook practical reforms, made them less and less
+ conciliatory. When the vigorous young child, therefore, showed a natural
+ desire to go beyond the humble functions accorded to it, the stern parents
+ proceeded to snub it and put it into its proper place. The first reprimand
+ was administered publicly in the capital. The St. Petersburg Provincial
+ Assembly, having shown a desire to play a political part, was promptly
+ closed by the Minister of the Interior, and some of the members were
+ exiled for a time to their homes in the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This warning produced merely a momentary effect. As the functions of the
+ Imperial Administration and of the Zemstvo had never been clearly defined,
+ and as each was inclined to extend the sphere of its activity, friction
+ became frequent. The Zemstvo had the right, for example, to co-operate in
+ the development of education, but as soon as it organised primary schools
+ and seminaries it came into contact with the Ministry of Public
+ Instruction. In other departments similar conflicts occurred, and the
+ tchinovniks came to suspect that the Zemstvo had the ambition to play the
+ part of a parliamentary Opposition. This suspicion found formal expression
+ in at least one secret official document, in which the writer declares
+ that "the Opposition has built itself firmly a nest in the Zemstvo." Now,
+ if we mean to be just to both parties in this little family quarrel, we
+ must admit that the Zemstvo, as I shall explain in a future chapter, had
+ ambitions of that kind, and it would have been better perhaps for the
+ country at the present moment if it had been able to realise them. But
+ this is a West-European idea. In Russia there is, and can be, no such
+ thing as "His Majesty's Opposition." To the Russian official mind the
+ three words seem to contain a logical contradiction. Opposition to
+ officials, even within the limits of the law, is equivalent to opposition
+ to the Autocratic Power, of which they are the incarnate emanations; and
+ opposition to what they consider the interests of autocracy comes within
+ measurable distance of high treason. It was considered necessary,
+ therefore, to curb and suppress the ambitious tendencies of the wayward
+ child, and accordingly it was placed more and more under the tutelage of
+ the provincial Governors. To show how the change was effected, let me give
+ an illustration. In the older arrangements the Governor could suspend the
+ action of the Zemstvo only on the ground of its being illegal or ultra
+ vires, and when there was an irreconcilable difference of opinion between
+ the two parties the question was decided judicially by the Senate; under
+ the more recent arrangements his Excellency can interpose his veto
+ whenever he considers that a decision, though it may be perfectly legal,
+ is not conducive to the public good, and differences of opinion are
+ referred, not to the Senate, but to the Minister of the Interior, who is
+ always naturally disposed to support the views of his subordinate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to put an end to all this insubordination, Count Tolstoy, the
+ reactionary Minister of the Interior, prepared a scheme of reorganisation
+ in accordance with his anti-liberal views, but he died before he could
+ carry it out, and a much milder reorganisation was adopted in the law of
+ 12th (24th) June, 1890. The principal changes introduced by that law were
+ that the number of delegates in the Assemblies was reduced by about a
+ fourth, and the relative strength of the different social classes was
+ altered. Under the old law the Noblesse had about 42 per cent., and the
+ peasantry about 38 per cent, of the seats; by the new electoral
+ arrangements the former have 57 per cent, and the latter about 30. It does
+ not necessarily follow, however, that the Assemblies are more conservative
+ or more subservient on that account. Liberalism and insubordination are
+ much more likely to be found among the nobles than among the peasants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In addition to all this, as there was an apprehension in the higher
+ official spheres of St. Petersburg that the opposition spirit of the
+ Zemstvo might find public expression in a printed form, the provincial
+ Governors received extensive rights of preventive censure with regard to
+ the publication of the minutes of Zemstvo Assemblies and similar
+ documents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What the bureaucracy, in its zeal to defend the integrity of the
+ Autocratic Power, feared most of all was combination for a common purpose
+ on the part of the Zemstvos of different provinces. It vetoed, therefore,
+ all such combinations, even for statistical purposes; and when it
+ discovered, a few years ago, that leading members of the Zemstvo from all
+ parts of the country were holding private meetings in Moscow for the
+ ostensible purpose of discussing economic questions, it ordered them to
+ return to their homes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even within its proper sphere, as defined by law, the Zemstvo has not
+ accomplished what was expected of it. The country has not been covered
+ with a network of macadamised roads, and the bridges are by no means as
+ safe as could be desired. Village schools and infirmaries are still far
+ below the requirements of the population. Little or nothing has been done
+ for the development of trade or manufactures; and the villages remain very
+ much what they were under the old Administration. Meanwhile the local
+ rates have been rising with alarming rapidity; and many people draw from
+ all this the conclusion that the Zemstvo is a worthless institution which
+ has increased the taxation without conferring any corresponding benefit on
+ the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we take as our criterion in judging the institution the exaggerated
+ expectations at first entertained, we may feel inclined to agree with this
+ conclusion, but this is merely tantamount to saying that the Zemstvo has
+ performed no miracles. Russia is much poorer and much less densely
+ populated than the more advanced nations which she takes as her model. To
+ suppose that she could at once create for herself by means of an
+ administrative reform all the conveniences which those more advanced
+ nations enjoy, was as absurd as it would be to imagine that a poor man can
+ at once construct a magnificent palace because he has received from a
+ wealthy neighbour the necessary architectural plans. Not only years but
+ generations must pass before Russia can assume the appearance of Germany,
+ France, or England. The metamorphosis may be accelerated or retarded by
+ good government, but it could not be effected at once, even if the
+ combined wisdom of all the philosophers and statesmen in Europe were
+ employed in legislating for the purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Zemstvo has, however, done much more than the majority of its critics
+ admit. It fulfils tolerably well, without scandalous peculation and
+ jobbery, its commonplace, every-day duties, and it has created a new and
+ more equitable system of rating, by which landed proprietors and
+ house-owners are made to bear their share of the public burdens. It has
+ done a very great deal to provide medical aid and primary education for
+ the common people, and it has improved wonderfully the condition of the
+ hospitals, lunatic asylums, and other benevolent institutions committed to
+ its charge. In its efforts to aid the peasantry it has helped to improve
+ the native breeds of horses and cattle, and it has created a system of
+ obligatory fire-insurance, together with means for preventing and
+ extinguishing fires in the villages&mdash;a most important matter in a
+ country where the peasants live in wooden houses and big fires are
+ fearfully frequent. After neglecting for a good many years the essential
+ question as to how the peasants' means of subsistence can be increased, it
+ has latterly, as I have mentioned in a foregoing chapter, helped them to
+ obtain improved agricultural implements and better seed, encouraged the
+ formation of small credit associations and savings banks, and appointed
+ agricultural inspectors to teach them how they may introduce modest
+ improvements within their limited means.* At the same time, in many
+ districts it has endeavoured to assist the home industries which are
+ threatened with annihilation by the big factories, and whenever measures
+ have been proposed for the benefit of the rural population, such as the
+ lowering of the land-redemption payments and the creation of the Peasant
+ Land Bank, it has invariably given them its cordial support.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The amount expended for these objects in 1897, the latest year
+ for which I have statistical data, was about a million and a half
+ of roubles, or, roughly speaking, 150,000 pounds, distributed under
+ the following heads:&mdash;1. Agricultural tuition
+ 41,100 pounds.
+ 2. Experimental stations, museums, etc 19,800
+ 3. Scientific agriculturists 17,400
+ 4. Agricultural industries 26,700
+ 5. Improving breeds of horses and cattle 45,300
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
+ 150,300 pounds.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ If you ask a zealous member of the Zemstvo why it has not done more he
+ will probably tell you that it is because its activity has been constantly
+ restricted and counteracted by the Government. The Assemblies were obliged
+ to accept as presidents the Marshals of Noblesse, many of whom were men of
+ antiquated ideas and retrograde principles. At every turn the more
+ enlightened, more active members found themselves opposed, thwarted, and
+ finally checkmated by the Imperial officials. When a laudable attempt was
+ made to tax trade and industry more equitably the scheme was vetoed, and
+ consequently the mercantile class, sure of being always taxed at a
+ ridiculously low maximum, have lost all interest in the proceedings. Even
+ with regard to the rating of landed and house property a low limit is
+ imposed by the Government, because it is afraid that if the rates were
+ raised much it would not be able to collect the heavy Imperial taxation.
+ The uncontrolled publicity which was at first enjoyed by the Assemblies
+ was afterwards curtailed by the bureaucracy. Under such restrictions all
+ free, vigorous action became impossible, and the institutions failed to
+ effect what was reasonably anticipated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this is true in a certain sense, but it is not the whole truth. If we
+ examine some of the definite charges brought against the institution we
+ shall understand better its real character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most common complaint made against it is that it has enormously
+ increased the rates. On that point there is no possibility of dispute. At
+ first its expenditure in the thirty-four provinces in which it existed was
+ under six millions of roubles; in two years (1868) it had jumped up to
+ fifteen millions; in 1875 it was nearly twenty-eight millions, in 1885
+ over forty-three millions, and at the end of the century it had attained
+ the respectable figure of 95,800,000 roubles. As each province had the
+ right of taxing itself, the increase varied greatly in different
+ provinces. In Smolensk, for example, it was only about thirty per cent.,
+ whilst in Samara it was 436, and in Viatka, where the peasant element
+ predominates, no less than 1,262 per cent.! In order to meet this
+ increase, the rates on land rose from under ten millions in 1868 to over
+ forty-seven millions in 1900. No wonder that the landowners who find it
+ difficult to work their estates at a profit should complain!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though this increase is disagreeable to the rate-payers, it does not
+ follow that it is excessive. In all countries rates and local taxation are
+ on the increase, and it is in the backward countries that they increase
+ most rapidly. In France, for example, the average yearly increase has been
+ 2.7 per cent., while in Austria it has been 5.59. In Russia it ought to
+ have been more than in Austria, whereas it has been, in the provinces with
+ Zemstvo institutions, only about 4 per cent. In comparison with the
+ Imperial taxation the local does not seem excessive when compared with
+ other countries. In England and Prussia, for instance, the State taxation
+ as compared with the local is as a hundred to fifty-four and fifty-one,
+ whilst in Russia it is as a hundred to sixteen.* A reduction in the
+ taxation as a whole would certainly contribute to the material welfare of
+ the rural population, but it is desirable that it should be made in the
+ Imperial taxes rather than in the rates, because the latter may be
+ regarded as something akin to productive investments, whilst the proceeds
+ of the former are expended largely on objects which have little or nothing
+ to do with the wants of the common people. In speaking thus I am assuming
+ that the local expenditure is made judiciously, and this is a matter on
+ which, I am bound to confess, there is by no means unanimity of opinion.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * These figures are taken from the best available
+ authorities, chiefly Schwanebach and Scalon, but I am not
+ prepared to guarantee their accuracy.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Hostile critics can point to facts which are, to say the least, strange
+ and anomalous. Out of the total of its revenue the Zemstvo spends about
+ twenty-eight per cent. under the heading of public health and benevolent
+ institutions; and about fifteen per cent. for popular education, whilst it
+ devotes only about six per cent. to roads and bridges, and until lately it
+ neglected, as I have said above, the means for improving agriculture and
+ directly increasing the income of the peasantry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before passing sentence with regard to these charges we must remember the
+ circumstances in which the Zemstvo was founded and has grown up. In the
+ early times its members were well-meaning men who had had very little
+ experience in administration or in practical life of any sort except the
+ old routine in which they had previously vegetated. Most of them had lived
+ enough in the country to know how much the peasants were in need of
+ medical assistance of the most elementary kind, and to this matter they at
+ once turned their attention. They tried to organise a system of doctors,
+ hospital assistants, and dispensaries by which the peasant would not have
+ to go more than fifteen or twenty miles to get a wound dressed or to have
+ a consultation or to obtain a simple remedy for ordinary ailments. They
+ felt the necessity, too, of thoroughly reorganising the hospitals and the
+ lunatic asylums, which were in a very unsatisfactory condition. Plainly
+ enough, there was here good work to be done. Then there were the higher
+ aims. In the absence of practical experience there were enthusiasms and
+ theories. Amongst these was the enthusiasm for education, and the theory
+ that the want of it was the chief reason why Russia had remained so far
+ behind the nations of Western Europe. Give us education, it was said, and
+ all other good things will be added thereto. Liberate the Russian people
+ from the bonds of ignorance as you have liberated it from the bonds of
+ serfage, and its wonderful natural capacities will then be able to create
+ everything that is required for its material, intellectual, and moral
+ welfare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If there was any one among the leaders who took a more sober, prosaic view
+ of things he was denounced as an ignoramus and a reactionary. Willingly or
+ unwillingly, everybody had to swim with the current. Roads and bridges
+ were not entirely neglected, but the efforts in that direction were
+ confined to the absolutely indispensable. For such prosaic concerns there
+ was no enthusiasm, and it was universally recognised that in Russia the
+ construction of good roads, as the term is understood in Western Europe,
+ was far beyond the resources of any Administration. Of the necessity for
+ such roads few were conscious. All that was required was to make it
+ possible to get from one place to another in ordinary weather and ordinary
+ circumstances. If a stream was too deep to be forded, a bridge had to be
+ built or a ferry had to be established; and if the approach to a bridge
+ was so marshy or muddy that vehicles often sank quite up to the axles and
+ had to be dragged out by ropes, with the assistance of the neighbouring
+ villagers, repairs had to be made. Beyond this the efforts of the Zemstvo
+ rarely went. Its road-building ambition remained within very modest
+ bounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the impoverishment of the peasantry and the necessity of improving
+ their system of agriculture, that question had hardly appeared above the
+ horizon. It might have to be dealt with in the future, but there was no
+ need for hurry. Once the rural population were educated, the question
+ would solve itself. It was not till about the year 1885 that it was
+ recognised to be more urgent than had been supposed, and some Zemstvos
+ perceived that the people might starve before its preparatory education
+ was completed. Repeated famines pushed the lesson home, and the landed
+ proprietors found their revenues diminished by the fall in the price of
+ grain on the European markets. Thus was raised the cry: "Agriculture in
+ Russia is on the decline! The country has entered on an acute economic
+ crisis! If energetic measures be not taken promptly the people will soon
+ find themselves confronted by starvation!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this cry of alarm the Zemstvo was neither deaf nor indifferent.
+ Recognising that the danger could be averted only by inducing the
+ peasantry to adopt a more intensive system of agriculture, it directed
+ more and more of its attention to agricultural improvements, and tried to
+ get them adopted.* It did, in short, all it could, according to its lights
+ and within the limits of its moderate resources. Its available resources
+ were small, unfortunately, for it was forbidden by the Government to
+ increase the rates, and it could not well dismiss doctors and close
+ dispensaries and schools when the people were clamouring for more. So at
+ least the defenders of the Zemstvo maintain, and they go so far as to
+ contend that it did well not to grapple with the impoverishment of the
+ peasantry at an earlier period, when the real conditions of the problem
+ and the means of solving it were only very imperfectly known: if it had
+ begun at that time it would have made great blunders and spent much money
+ to little purpose.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Vide supra, p. 489.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ However this may be, it would certainly be unfair to condemn the Zemstvo
+ for not being greatly in advance of public opinion. If it endeavours
+ strenuously to supply all clearly recognised wants, that is all that can
+ reasonably be expected of it. What it may be more justly reproached with
+ is, in my opinion, that it is, to a certain extent, imbued with that
+ unpractical, pedantic spirit which is commonly supposed to reside
+ exclusively in the Imperial Administration. But here again it simply
+ reflects public opinion and certain intellectual peculiarities of the
+ educated classes. When a Russian begins to write on a simple everyday
+ subject, he likes to connect it with general principles, philosophy, or
+ history, and begins, perhaps, by expounding his views on the intellectual
+ and social developments of humanity in general and of Russia in
+ particular. If he has sufficient space at his disposal he may even tell
+ you something about the early period of Russian history previous to the
+ Mongol invasion before he gets to the simple matter in hand. In a previous
+ chapter I have described the process of "shedding on a subject the light
+ of science" in Imperial legislation.* In Zemstvo activity we often meet
+ with pedantry of a similar kind.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Vide supra, p. 343.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ If this pedantry were confined to the writing of Reports it might not do
+ much harm. Unfortunately, it often appears in the sphere of action. To
+ illustrate this I take a recent instance from the province of
+ Nizhni-Novgorod. The Zemstvo of that province received from the Central
+ Government in 1895 a certain amount of capital for road-improvement, with
+ instructions from the Ministry of Interior that it should classify the
+ roads according to their relative importance and improve them accordingly.
+ Any intelligent person well acquainted with the region might have made, in
+ the course of a week or two, the required classification accurately enough
+ for all practical purposes. Instead of adopting this simple procedure,
+ what does the Zemstvo do? It chooses one of the eleven districts of which
+ the province is composed and instructs its statistical department to
+ describe all the villages with a view of determining the amount of traffic
+ which each will probably contribute to the general movement, and then it
+ verifies its a priori conclusions by means of a detachment of specially
+ selected "registrars," posted at all the crossways during six days of each
+ month. These registrars doubtless inscribed every peasant cart as it
+ passed and made a rough estimate of the weight of its load. When this
+ complicated and expensive procedure was completed for one district it was
+ applied to another; but at the end of three years, before all the villages
+ of this second district had been described and the traffic estimated, the
+ energy of the statistical department seems to have flagged, and, like a
+ young author impatient to see himself in print, it published a volume at
+ the public expense which no one will ever read.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cost entailed by this procedure is not known, but we may form some
+ idea of the amount of time required for the whole operation. It is a
+ simple rule-of-three sum. If it took three years for the preparatory
+ investigation of a district and a half, how many years will be required
+ for eleven districts? More than twenty years! During that period it would
+ seem that the roads are to remain as they are, and when the moment comes
+ for improving them it will be found that, unless the province is condemned
+ to economic stagnation, the "valuable statistical material" collected at
+ such an expenditure of time and money is in great part antiquated and
+ useless. The statistical department will be compelled, therefore, like
+ another unfortunate Sisyphus, to begin the work anew, and it is difficult
+ to see how the Zemstvo, unless it becomes a little more practical, is ever
+ to get out of the vicious circle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this case the evil result of pedantry was simply unnecessary delay, and
+ in the meantime the capital was accumulating, unless the interest was
+ entirely swallowed up by the statistical researches; but there are cases
+ in which the consequences are more serious. Let me take an illustration
+ from the enlightened province of Moscow. It was observed that certain
+ villages were particularly unhealthy, and it was pointed out by a local
+ doctor that the inhabitants were in the habit of using for domestic
+ purposes the water of ponds which were in a filthy condition. What was
+ evidently wanted was good wells, and a practical man would at once have
+ taken measures to have them dug. Not so the District Zemstvo. It at once
+ transformed the simple fact into a "question" requiring scientific
+ investigation. A commission was appointed to study the problem, and after
+ much deliberation it was decided to make a geological survey in order to
+ ascertain the depth of good water throughout the district as a preparatory
+ step towards preparing a project which will some day be discussed in the
+ District Assembly, and perhaps in the Assembly of the province. Whilst all
+ this is being done according to the strict principles of bureaucratic
+ procedure, the unfortunate peasants for whose benefit the investigation
+ was undertaken continue to drink the muddy water of the dirty ponds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Incidents of that kind, which I might multiply almost to any extent,
+ remind one of the proverbial formalism of the Chinese; but between Chinese
+ and Russian pedantry there is an essential difference. In the Middle
+ Kingdom the sacrifice of practical considerations proceeds from an
+ exaggerated veneration of the wisdom of ancestors; in the Empire of the
+ Tsars it is due to an exaggerated adoration of the goddess Nauka (Science)
+ and a habit of appealing to abstract principles and scientific methods
+ when only a little plain common-sense is required.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On one occasion, I remember, in a District Assembly of the province of
+ Riazan, when the subject of primary schools was being discussed, an
+ influential member started up, and proposed that an obligatory system of
+ education should at once be introduced throughout the whole district.
+ Strange to say, the motion was very nearly carried, though all the members
+ present knew&mdash;or at least might have known if they had taken the
+ trouble to inquire&mdash;that the actual number of schools would have to
+ be multiplied twenty-fold, and all were agreed that the local rates must
+ not be increased. To preserve his reputation for liberalism, the
+ honourable member further proposed that, though the system should be
+ obligatory, no fines, punishments, or other means of compulsion should be
+ employed. How a system could be obligatory without using some means of
+ compulsion, he did not condescend to explain. To get out of the difficulty
+ one of his supporters suggested that the peasants who did not send their
+ children to school should be excluded from serving as office-bearers in
+ the Communes; but this proposition merely created a laugh, for many
+ deputies knew that the peasants would regard this supposed punishment as a
+ valuable privilege. And whilst this discussion about the necessity of
+ introducing an ideal system of obligatory education was being carried on,
+ the street before the windows of the room was covered with a stratum of
+ mud nearly two feet in depth! The other streets were in a similar
+ condition; and a large number of the members always arrived late, because
+ it was almost impossible to come on foot, and there was only one public
+ conveyance in the town. Many members had, fortunately, their private
+ conveyances, but even in these locomotion was by no means easy. One day,
+ in the principal thoroughfare, a member had his tarantass overturned, and
+ he himself was thrown into the mud!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is hardly fair to compare the Zemstvo with the older institutions of a
+ similar kind in Western Europe, and especially with our own local
+ self-government. Our institutions have all grown out of real, practical
+ wants keenly felt by a large section of the population. Cautious and
+ conservative in all that concerns the public welfare, we regard change as
+ a necessary evil, and put off the evil day as long as possible, even when
+ convinced that it must inevitably come. Thus our administrative wants are
+ always in advance of our means of satisfying them, and we use vigorously
+ those means as soon as they are supplied. Our method of supplying the
+ means, too, is peculiar. Instead of making a tabula rasa, and beginning
+ from the foundations, we utilise to the utmost what we happen to possess,
+ and add merely what is absolutely indispensable. Metaphorically speaking,
+ we repair and extend our political edifice according to the changing
+ necessities of our mode of life, without paying much attention to abstract
+ principles or the contingencies of the distant future. The building may be
+ an aesthetic monstrosity, belonging to no recognised style of
+ architecture, and built in defiance of the principles laid down by
+ philosophical art critics, but it is well adapted to our requirements, and
+ every hole and corner of it is sure to be utilised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very different has been the political history of Russia during the last
+ two centuries. It may be briefly described as a series of revolutions
+ effected peaceably by the Autocratic Power. Each young energetic sovereign
+ has attempted to inaugurate a new epoch by thoroughly remodelling the
+ Administration according to the most approved foreign political philosophy
+ of the time. Institutions have not been allowed to grow spontaneously out
+ of popular wants, but have been invented by bureaucratic theorists to
+ satisfy wants of which the people were still unconscious. The
+ administrative machine has therefore derived little or no motive force
+ from the people, and has always been kept in motion by the unaided energy
+ of the Central Government. Under these circumstances it is not surprising
+ that the repeated attempts of the Government to lighten the burdens of
+ centralised administration by creating organs of local self-government
+ should not have been very successful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Zemstvo, it is true, offered better chances of success than any of its
+ predecessors. A large portion of the nobles had become alive to the
+ necessity of improving the administration, and the popular interest in
+ public affairs was much greater than at any former period. Hence there was
+ at first a period of enthusiasm, during which great preparations were made
+ for future activity, and not a little was actually effected. The
+ institution had all the charm of novelty, and the members felt that the
+ eyes of the public were upon them. For a time all went well, and the
+ Zemstvo was so well pleased with its own activity that the satirical
+ journals compared it to Narcissus admiring his image reflected in the
+ pool. But when the charm of novelty had passed and the public turned its
+ attention to other matters, the spasmodic energy evaporated, and many of
+ the most active members looked about for more lucrative employment. Such
+ employment was easily found, for at that time there was an unusual demand
+ for able, energetic, educated men. Several branches of the civil service
+ were being reorganised, and railways, banks, and joint-stock companies
+ were being rapidly multiplied. With these the Zemstvo had great difficulty
+ in competing. It could not, like the Imperial service, offer pensions,
+ decorations, and prospects of promotion, nor could it pay such large
+ salaries as the commercial and industrial enterprises. In consequence of
+ all this, the quality of the executive bureaux deteriorated at the same
+ time as the public interest in the institution diminished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To be just to the Zemstvo, I must add that, with all its defects and
+ errors, it is infinitely better than the institutions which it replaced.
+ If we compare it with previous attempts to create local self-government,
+ we must admit that the Russians have made great progress in their
+ political education. What its future may be I do not venture to predict.
+ From its infancy it has had, as we have seen, the ambition to play a great
+ political part, and at the beginning of the recent stirring times in St.
+ Petersburg its leading representatives in conclave assembled took upon
+ themselves to express what they considered the national demand for liberal
+ representative institutions. The desire, which had previously from time to
+ time been expressed timidly and vaguely in loyal addresses to the Tsar,
+ that a central Zemstvo Assembly, bearing the ancient title of Zemski
+ Sobor, should be convoked in the capital and endowed with political
+ functions, was now put forward by the representatives in plain unvarnished
+ form. Whether this desire is destined to be realised time will show.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0033" id="link2HCH0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE NEW LAW COURTS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Judicial Procedure in the Olden Times&mdash;Defects and Abuses&mdash;Radical
+ Reform&mdash;The New System&mdash;Justices of the Peace and Monthly
+ Sessions&mdash;The Regular Tribunals&mdash;Court of Revision&mdash;Modification
+ of the Original Plan&mdash;How Does the System Work?&mdash;Rapid
+ Acclimatisation&mdash;The Bench&mdash;The Jury&mdash;Acquittal of
+ Criminals Who Confess Their Crimes&mdash;Peasants, Merchants, and Nobles
+ as Jurymen&mdash;Independence and Political Significance of the New
+ Courts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After serf-emancipation and local self-government, the subject which
+ demanded most urgently the attention of reformers was the judicial
+ organisation, which had sunk to a depth of inefficiency and corruption
+ difficult to describe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In early times the dispensation of justice in Russia, as in other States
+ of a primitive type, had a thoroughly popular character. The State was
+ still in its infancy, and the duty of defending the person, the property,
+ and the rights of individuals lay, of necessity, chiefly on the
+ individuals themselves. Self-help formed the basis of the judicial
+ procedure, and the State merely assisted the individual to protect his
+ rights and to avenge himself on those who voluntarily infringed them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the rapid development of the Autocratic Power all this was changed.
+ Autocracy endeavoured to drive and regulate the social machine by its own
+ unaided force, and regarded with suspicion and jealousy all spontaneous
+ action in the people. The dispensation of justice was accordingly
+ appropriated by the central authority, absorbed into the Administration,
+ and withdrawn from public control. Themis retired from the market-place,
+ shut herself up in a dark room from which the contending parties and the
+ public gaze were rigorously excluded, surrounded herself with secretaries
+ and scribes who put the rights and claims of the litigants into whatever
+ form they thought proper, weighed according to her own judgment the
+ arguments presented to her by her own servants, and came forth from her
+ seclusion merely to present a ready-made decision or to punish the accused
+ whom she considered guilty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This change, though perhaps to some extent necessary, was attended with
+ very bad consequences. Freed from the control of the contending parties
+ and of the public, the courts acted as uncontrolled human nature generally
+ does. Injustice, extortion, bribery, and corruption assumed gigantic
+ proportions, and against these evils the Government found no better remedy
+ than a system of complicated formalities and ingenious checks. The
+ judicial functionaries were hedged in by a multitude of regulations, so
+ numerous and complicated that it seemed impossible for even the most
+ unjust judge to swerve from the path of uprightness. Explicit, minute
+ rules were laid down for investigating facts and weighing evidence; every
+ scrap of evidence and every legal ground on which the decision was based
+ were committed to writing; every act in the complicated process of coming
+ to a decision was made the subject of a formal document, and duly entered
+ in various registers; every document and register had to be signed and
+ countersigned by various officials who were supposed to control each
+ other; every decision might be carried to a higher court and made to pass
+ a second time through the bureaucratic machine. In a word, the legislature
+ introduced a system of formal written procedure of the most complicated
+ kind, in the belief that by this means mistakes and dishonesty would be
+ rendered impossible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be reasonably doubted whether this system of judicial
+ administration can anywhere give satisfactory results. It is everywhere
+ found by experience that in tribunals from which the healthy atmosphere of
+ publicity is excluded justice languishes, and a great many ugly plants
+ shoot up with wonderful vitality. Languid indifference, an
+ indiscriminating spirit of routine, and unblushing dishonesty invariably
+ creep in through the little chinks and crevices of the barrier raised
+ against them, and no method of hermetically sealing these chinks and
+ crevices has yet been invented. The attempt to close them up by increasing
+ the formalities and multiplying the courts of appeal and revision merely
+ adds to the tediousness of the procedure, and withdraws the whole process
+ still more completely from public control. At the same time the absence of
+ free discussion between the contending parties renders the task of the
+ judge enormously difficult. If the system is to succeed at all, it must
+ provide a body of able, intelligent, thoroughly-trained jurists, and must
+ place them beyond the reach of bribery and other forms of corruption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Russia neither of these conditions was fulfilled. Instead of
+ endeavouring to create a body of well-trained jurists, the Government went
+ further and further in the direction of letting the judges be chosen for a
+ short period by popular election from among men who had never received a
+ juridical education, or a fair education of any kind; whilst the place of
+ judge was so poorly paid, and stood so low in public estimation, that the
+ temptations to dishonesty were difficult to resist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The practice of choosing the judges by popular election was an attempt to
+ restore to the courts something of their old popular character; but it did
+ not succeed, for very obvious reasons. Popular election in a judicial
+ organisation is useful only when the courts are public and the procedure
+ simple; on the contrary, it is positively prejudicial when the procedure
+ is in writing and extremely complicated. And so it proved in Russia. The
+ elected judges, unprepared for their work, and liable to be changed at
+ short intervals, rarely acquired a knowledge of law or procedure. They
+ were for the most part poor, indolent landed proprietors, who did little
+ more than sign the decisions prepared for them by the permanent officials.
+ Even when a judge happened to have some legal knowledge he found small
+ scope for its application, for he rarely, if ever, examined personally the
+ materials out of which a decision was to be elaborated. The whole of the
+ preliminary work, which was in reality the most important, was performed
+ by minor officials under the direction of the secretary of the court. In
+ criminal cases, for instance, the secretary examined the written evidence&mdash;all
+ evidence was taken down in writing&mdash;extracted what he considered the
+ essential points, arranged them as he thought proper, quoted the laws
+ which ought in his opinion to be applied, put all this into a report, and
+ read the report to the judges. Of course the judges, if they had no
+ personal interest in the decision, accepted the secretary's view of the
+ case. If they did not, all the preliminary work had to be done anew by
+ themselves&mdash;a task that few judges were able, and still fewer
+ willing, to perform. Thus the decision lay virtually in the hands of the
+ secretary and the minor officials, and in general neither the secretary
+ nor the minor officials were fit persons to have such power. There is no
+ need to detail here the ingenious expedients by which they increased their
+ meagre salaries, and how they generally contrived to extract money from
+ both parties.* Suffice it to say that in general the chancelleries of the
+ courts were dens of pettifogging rascality, and the habitual, unblushing
+ bribery had a negative as well as a positive effect. If a person accused
+ of some crime had no money wherewith to grease the palm of the secretary
+ he might remain in prison for years without being brought to trial. A
+ well-known Russian writer still living relates that when visiting a prison
+ in the province of Nizhni-Novgorod he found among the inmates undergoing
+ preliminary arrest two peasant women, who were accused of setting fire to
+ a hayrick to revenge themselves on a landed proprietor, a crime for which
+ the legal punishment was from four to eight months' imprisonment. One of
+ them had a son of seven years of age, and the other a son of twelve, both
+ of whom had been born in the prison, and had lived there ever since among
+ the criminals. Such a long preliminary arrest caused no surprise or
+ indignation among those who heard of it, because it was quite a common
+ occurrence. Every one knew that bribes were taken not only by the
+ secretary and his scribes, but also by the judges, who were elected by the
+ local Noblesse from its own ranks.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Old book-catalogues sometimes mention a play bearing the
+ significant title, "The Unheard-of Wonder; or, The Honest
+ Secretary" (Neslykhannoe Dyelo ili Tchestny Sekretar). I
+ have never seen this curious production, but I have no doubt
+ that it referred to the peculiarities of the old judicial
+ procedure.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the scale of punishments, notwithstanding some humanitarian
+ principles in the legislation, they were very severe, and corporal
+ punishment played amongst them a disagreeably prominent part. Capital
+ sentences were abolished as early as 1753-54, but castigation with the
+ knout, which often ended fatally, continued until 1845, when it was
+ replaced by flogging in the civil administration, though retained for the
+ military and for insubordinate convicts. For the non-privileged classes
+ the knout or the lash supplemented nearly all punishments of a criminal
+ kind. When a man was condemned, for example, to penal servitude, he
+ received publicly from thirty to one hundred lashes, and was then branded
+ on the forehead and cheeks with the letters K. A. T.&mdash;the first three
+ letters of katorzhnik (convict). If he appealed he received his lashes all
+ the same, and if his appeal was rejected by the Senate he received some
+ more castigation for having troubled unnecessarily the higher judicial
+ authorities. For the military and insubordinate convicts there was a
+ barbarous punishment called Spitsruten, to the extent of 5,000 or 6,000
+ blows, which often ended in the death of the unfortunate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The use of torture in criminal investigations was formally abolished in
+ 1801, but if we may believe the testimony of a public prosecutor, it was
+ occasionally used in Moscow as late as 1850.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The defects and abuses of the old system were so flagrant that they became
+ known even to the Emperor Nicholas I., and caused him momentary
+ indignation, but he never attempted seriously to root them out. In 1844,
+ for example, he heard of some gross abuses in a tribunal not far from the
+ Winter Palace, and ordered an investigation. Baron Korff, to whom the
+ investigation was entrusted, brought to light what he called "a yawning
+ abyss of all possible horrors, which have been accumulating for years,"
+ and his Majesty, after reading the report, wrote upon it with his own
+ hand: "Unheard-of disgrace! The carelessness of the authority immediately
+ concerned is incredible and unpardonable. I feel ashamed and sad that such
+ disorder could exist almost under my eyes and remain unknown to me."
+ Unfortunately the outburst of Imperial indignation did not last long
+ enough to produce any desirable consequences. The only result was that one
+ member of the tribunal was dismissed from the service, and the
+ Governor-General of St. Petersburg had to resign, but the latter
+ subsequently received an honorary reward, and the Emperor remarked that he
+ was himself to blame for having kept the Governor-General so long at his
+ post.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When his Majesty's habitual optimism happened to be troubled by incidents
+ of this sort he probably consoled himself with remembering that he had
+ ordered some preparatory work, by which the administration of justice
+ might be improved, and this work was being diligently carried out in the
+ legislative section of his own chancery by Count Bludof, one of the ablest
+ Russian lawyers of his time. Unfortunately the existing state of things
+ was not thereby improved, because the preparatory work was not of the kind
+ that was wanted. On the assumption that any evil which might exist could
+ be removed by improving the laws, Count Bludof devoted his efforts almost
+ entirely to codification. In reality what was required was to change
+ radically the organisation of the courts and the procedure, and above all
+ to let in on their proceedings the cleansing atmosphere of publicity. This
+ the Emperor Nicholas could not understand, and if he had understood it he
+ could not have brought himself to adopt the appropriate remedies, because
+ radical reform and control of officials by public opinion were his two pet
+ bugbears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very different was his son and successor, Alexander II., in the first
+ years of his reign. In his accession manifesto a prominent place was given
+ to his desire that justice and mercy should reign in the courts of law.
+ Referring to these words in a later manifesto, he explained his wishes
+ more fully as "the desire to establish in Russia expeditious, just,
+ merciful, impartial courts of justice for all our subjects; to raise the
+ judicial authority; to give it the proper independence, and in general to
+ implant in the people that respect for the law which ought to be the
+ constant guide of all and every one from the highest to the lowest." These
+ were not mere vain words. Peremptory orders had been given that the great
+ work should be undertaken without delay, and when the Emancipation
+ question was being discussed in the Provincial Committees, the Council of
+ State examined the question of judicial reform "from the historical, the
+ theoretical, and the practical point of view," and came to the conclusion
+ that the existing organisation must be completely transformed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commission appointed to consider this important matter filed a lengthy
+ indictment against the existing system, and pointed out no less than
+ twenty-five radical defects. To remove these it proposed that the judicial
+ organisation should be completely separated from all other branches of the
+ Administration; that the most ample publicity, with trial by jury in
+ criminal cases, should be introduced into the tribunals; that Justice of
+ Peace Courts should be created for petty affairs; and that the procedure
+ in the ordinary courts should be greatly simplified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These fundamental principles were published by Imperial command on
+ September 29th, 1862&mdash;a year and a half after the publication of the
+ Emancipation Manifesto&mdash;and on November 20th, 1864, the new
+ legislation founded on these principles received the Imperial sanction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like most institutions erected on a tabula rasa, the new system is at once
+ simple and symmetrical. As a whole, the architecture of the edifice is
+ decidedly French, but here and there we may detect unmistakable symptoms
+ of English influence. It is not, however, a servile copy of any older
+ edifice; and it may be fairly said that, though every individual part has
+ been fashioned according to a foreign model, the whole has a certain
+ originality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lower part of the building in its original form was composed of two
+ great sections, distinct from, and independent of, each other&mdash;on the
+ one hand the Justice of Peace Courts, and on the other the Regular
+ Tribunals. Both sections contained an Ordinary Court and a Court of
+ Appeal. The upper part of the building, covering equally both sections,
+ was the Senate as Supreme Court of Revision (Cour de Cassation).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The distinctive character of the two independent sections may be detected
+ at a glance. The function of the Justice of Peace Courts is to decide
+ petty cases that involve no abstruse legal principles, and to settle, if
+ possible by conciliation, those petty conflicts and disputes which arise
+ naturally in the relations of everyday life; the function of the Regular
+ Tribunals is to take cognisance of those graver affairs in which the
+ fortune or honour of individuals or families is more or less implicated,
+ or in which the public tranquillity is seriously endangered. The two kinds
+ of courts were organised in accordance with these intended functions. In
+ the former the procedure is simple and conciliatory, the jurisdiction is
+ confined to cases of little importance, and the judges were at first
+ chosen by popular election, generally from among the local inhabitants. In
+ the latter there is more of "the pomp and majesty of the law." The
+ procedure is more strict and formal, the jurisdiction is unlimited with
+ regard to the importance of the cases, and the judges are trained jurists
+ nominated by the Emperor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Justice of Peace Courts received jurisdiction over all obligations and
+ civil injuries in which the sum at stake was not more than 500 roubles&mdash;about
+ 50 pounds&mdash;and all criminal affairs in which the legal punishment did
+ not exceed 300 roubles&mdash;about 30 pounds&mdash;or one year of
+ punishment. When any one had a complaint to make, he might go to the
+ Justice of the Peace (Mirovoi Sudya) and explain the affair orally, or in
+ writing, without observing any formalities; and if the complaint seemed
+ well founded, the Justice at once fixed a day for hearing the case, and
+ gave the other party notice to appear at the appointed time. When the time
+ appointed arrived, the affair was discussed publicly and orally, either by
+ the parties themselves, or by any representatives whom they might appoint.
+ If it was a civil suit, the Justice began by proposing to the parties to
+ terminate it at once by a compromise, and indicated what he considered a
+ fair arrangement. Many affairs were terminated in this simple way. If,
+ however, either of the parties refused to consent to a compromise, the
+ matter was fully discussed, and the Justice gave a formal written
+ decision, containing the grounds on which it was based. In criminal cases
+ the amount of punishment was always determined by reference to a special
+ Criminal Code.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the sum at issue exceeded thirty roubles&mdash;about 3 pounds&mdash;or
+ if the punishment exceeded a fine of fifteen roubles&mdash;about 30s.&mdash;or
+ three days of arrest, an appeal might be made to the Assembly of Justices
+ (Mirovoi Syezd). This is a point in which English rather than French
+ institutions were taken as a model. According to the French system, all
+ appeals from a Juge de Paix are made to the "Tribunal d'Arrondissement,"
+ and the Justice of Peace Courts are thereby subordinated to the Regular
+ Tribunals. According to the English system, certain cases may be carried
+ on appeal from the Justice of the Peace to the Quarter Sessions. This
+ latter principle was adopted and greatly developed by the Russian
+ legislation. The Monthly Sessions, composed of all the Justices of the
+ District (uyezd), considered appeals against the decisions of the
+ individual Justices. The procedure was simple and informal, as in the
+ lower court, but an assistant of the Procureur was always present. This
+ functionary gave his opinion in some civil and in all criminal cases
+ immediately after the debate, and the Court took his opinion into
+ consideration in framing its judgment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the other great section of the judicial organisation&mdash;the Regular
+ Tribunals&mdash;there are likewise Ordinary Courts and Courts of Appeal,
+ called respectively "Tribunaux d'Arrondissement" (Okruzhniye Sudy) and
+ "Palais de Justice" (Sudebniya Palaty). Each Ordinary Court has
+ jurisdiction over several Districts (uyezdy), and the jurisdiction of each
+ Court of Appeals comprehends several Provinces. All civil cases are
+ subject to appeal, however small the sum at stake may be, but criminal
+ cases are decided FINALLY by the lower court with the aid of a jury. Thus
+ in criminal affairs the "Palais de Justice" is not at all a court of
+ appeal, but as no regular criminal prosecution can be raised without its
+ formal consent, it controls in some measure the action of the lower
+ courts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the general reader cannot be supposed to take an interest in the
+ details of civil procedure, I shall merely say on this subject that in
+ both sections of the Regular Tribunals the cases are always tried by at
+ least three judges, the sittings are public, and oral debates by
+ officially recognised advocates form an important part of the proceedings.
+ I venture, however, to speak a little more at length regarding the change
+ which has been made in the criminal procedure&mdash;a subject that is less
+ technical and more interesting for the uninitiated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Down to the time of the recent judicial reforms the procedure in criminal
+ cases was secret and inquisitorial. The accused had little opportunity of
+ defending himself, but, on the other hand, the State took endless formal
+ precautions against condemning the innocent. The practical consequence of
+ this system was that an innocent man might remain for years in prison
+ until the authorities convinced themselves of his innocence, whilst a
+ clever criminal might indefinitely postpone his condemnation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In studying the history of criminal procedure in foreign countries, those
+ who were entrusted with the task of preparing projects of reform found
+ that nearly every country of Europe had experienced the evils from which
+ Russia was suffering, and that one country after another had come to the
+ conviction that the most efficient means of removing these evils was to
+ replace the inquisitorial by litigious procedure, to give a fair field and
+ no favour to the prosecutor and the accused, and allow them to fight out
+ their battle with whatever legal weapons they might think fit. Further, it
+ was discovered that, according to the most competent foreign authorities,
+ it was well in this modern form of judicial combat to leave the decision
+ to a jury of respectable citizens. The steps which Russia had to take were
+ thus clearly marked out by the experience of other nations, and it was
+ decided that they should be taken at once. The organs for the prosecution
+ of supposed criminals were carefully separated from the judges on the one
+ hand, and from the police on the other; oral discussions between the
+ Public Prosecutor and the prisoner's counsel, together with oral
+ examination and cross-questioning of witnesses, were introduced into the
+ procedure; and the jury was made an essential factor in criminal trials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When a case, whether civil or criminal, has been decided in the Regular
+ Tribunals, there is no possibility of appeal in the strict sense of the
+ term, but an application may be made for a revision of the case on the
+ ground of technical informality. To use the French terms, there cannot be
+ appel, but there may be cassation. If there has been any omission or
+ transgression of essential legal formalities, or if the Court has
+ overstepped the bounds of its legal authority, the injured party may make
+ an application to have the case revised and tried again.* This is not,
+ according to French juridical conceptions, an appeal. The Court of
+ Revision** (Cour de Cassation) does not enter into the material facts of
+ the case, but merely decides the question as to whether the essential
+ formalities have been duly observed, and as to whether the law has been
+ properly interpreted and applied; and if it be found on examination that
+ there is some ground for invalidating the decision, it does not decide the
+ case. According to the new Russian system, the sole Court of Revision is
+ the Senate.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This is the procedure referred to by Karl Karl'itch, vide
+ supra, p 37.
+
+ ** I am quite aware that the term "Court of Revision" is
+ equivocal, but I have no better term to propose, and I hope
+ the above explanations will prevent confusion.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Senate thus forms the regulator of the whole judicial system, but its
+ action is merely regulative. It takes cognisance only of what is presented
+ to it, and supplies to the machine no motive power. If any of the lower
+ courts should work slowly or cease to work altogether, the Senate might
+ remain ignorant of the fact, and certainly could take no official notice
+ of it. It was considered necessary, therefore, to supplement the
+ spontaneous vitality of the lower courts, and for this purpose was created
+ a special centralised judicial administration, at the head of which was
+ placed the Minister of Justice. The Minister is "Procureur-General," and
+ has subordinates in all the courts. The primary function of this
+ administration is to preserve the force of the law, to detect and repair
+ all infractions of judicial order, to defend the interests of the State
+ and of those persons who are officially recognised as incapable of taking
+ charge of their own affairs, and to act in criminal matters as Public
+ Prosecutor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Viewed as a whole, and from a little distance, this grand judicial edifice
+ seems perfectly symmetrical, but a closer and more minute inspection
+ brings to light unmistakable indications of a change of plan during the
+ process of construction. Though the work lasted only about half-a-dozen
+ years, the style of the upper differs from the style of the lower parts,
+ precisely as in those Gothic cathedrals which grew up slowly during the
+ course of centuries. And there is nothing here that need surprise us, for
+ a considerable change took place in the opinions of the official world
+ during that short period. The reform was conceived at a time of uncritical
+ enthusiasm for advanced liberal ideas, of boundless faith in the dictates
+ of science, of unquestioning reliance on public spirit, public control,
+ and public honesty&mdash;a time in which it was believed that the public
+ would spontaneously do everything necessary for the common weal, if it
+ were only freed from the administrative swaddling-clothes in which it had
+ been hitherto bound. Still smarting from the severe regime of Nicholas,
+ men thought more about protecting the rights of the individual than about
+ preserving public order, and under the influence of the socialistic ideas
+ in vogue malefactors were regarded as the unfortunate, involuntary victims
+ of social inequality and injustice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards the end of the period in question all this had begun to change.
+ Many were beginning to perceive that liberty might easily turn to license,
+ that the spontaneous public energy was largely expended in empty words,
+ and that a certain amount of hierarchical discipline was necessary in
+ order to keep the public administration in motion. It was found,
+ therefore, in 1864, that it was impossible to carry out to their ultimate
+ consequences the general principles laid down and published in 1862. Even
+ in those parts of the legislation which were actually put in force, it was
+ found necessary to make modifications in an indirect, covert way. Of
+ these, one may be cited by way of illustration. In 1860 criminal inquiries
+ were taken out of the hands of the police and transferred to Juges
+ d'instruction (Sudebniye Sledovateli), who were almost entirely
+ independent of the Public Prosecutor, and could not be removed unless
+ condemned for some legal transgression by a Regular Tribunal. This reform
+ created at first much rejoicing and great expectations, because it raised
+ a barrier against the tyranny of the police and against the arbitrary
+ power of the higher officials. But very soon the defects of the system
+ became apparent. Many Juges d'instruction, feeling themselves independent,
+ and knowing that they would not be prosecuted except for some flagrantly
+ illegal act, gave way to indolence, and spent their time in inactivity.*
+ In such cases it was always difficult, and sometimes impossible, to
+ procure a condemnation&mdash;for indolence must assume gigantic
+ proportions in order to become a crime&mdash;and the minister had to adopt
+ the practice of appointing, without Imperial confirmation, temporary Juges
+ d'instruction whom he could remove at pleasure.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * A flagrant case of this kind came under my own
+ observation.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It is unnecessary, however, to enter into these theoretical defects. The
+ important question for the general public is: How do the institutions work
+ in the local conditions in which they are placed?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is a question which has an interest not only for Russians, but for
+ all students of social science, for it tends to throw light on the
+ difficult subject as to how far institutions may be successfully
+ transplanted to a foreign soil. Many thinkers hold, and not without
+ reason, that no institution can work well unless it is the natural product
+ of previous historical development. Now we have here an opportunity of
+ testing this theory by experience; we have even what Bacon terms an
+ experimentum crucis. This new judicial system is an artificial creation
+ constructed in accordance with principles laid down by foreign jurists.
+ All that the elaborators of the project said about developing old
+ institutions was mere talk. In reality they made a tabula rasa of the
+ existing organisation. If the introduction of public oral procedure and
+ trial by jury was a return to ancient customs, it was a return to what had
+ been long since forgotten by all except antiquarian specialists, and no
+ serious attempt was made to develop what actually existed. One form,
+ indeed, of oral procedure had been preserved in the Code, but it had
+ fallen completely into disuse, and seems to have been overlooked by the
+ elaborators of the new system.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * I refer to the so-called Sud po forme established by an
+ ukaz of Peter the Great, in 1723. I was much astonished
+ when I accidentally stumbled upon it in the Code.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Having in general little confidence in institutions which spring
+ ready-made from the brains of autocratic legislators, I expected to find
+ that this new judicial organisation, which looks so well on paper, was
+ well-nigh worthless in reality. Observation, however, has not confirmed my
+ pessimistic expectations. On the contrary, I have found that these new
+ institutions, though they have not yet had time to strike deep root, and
+ are very far from being perfect even in the human sense of the term, work
+ on the whole remarkably well, and have already conferred immense benefit
+ on the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the course of a few years the Justice of Peace Courts, which may
+ perhaps be called the newest part of the new institutions, became
+ thoroughly acclimatised, as if they had existed for generations. As soon
+ as they were opened they became extremely popular. In Moscow the
+ authorities had calculated that under the new system the number of cases
+ would be more than doubled, and that on an average each justice would have
+ nearly a thousand cases brought before him in the course of the year. The
+ reality far exceeded their expectations: each justice had on an average
+ 2,800 cases. In St. Petersburg and the other large towns the amount of
+ work which the justices had to get through was equally great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To understand the popularity of the Justice of Peace Courts, we must know
+ something of the old police courts which they supplanted. The nobles, the
+ military, and the small officials had always looked on the police with
+ contempt, because their position secured them against interference, and
+ the merchants acquired a similar immunity by submitting to blackmail,
+ which often took the form of a fixed subsidy; but the lower classes in
+ town and country stood, in fear of the humblest policeman, and did not
+ dare to complain of him to his superiors. If two workmen brought their
+ differences before a police court, instead of getting their case decided
+ on grounds of equity, they were pretty sure to get scolded in language
+ unfit for ears polite, or to receive still worse treatment. Even among the
+ higher officers of the force many became famous for their brutality. A
+ Gorodnitchi of the town of Tcherkassy, for example, made for himself in
+ this respect a considerable reputation. If any humble individual ventured
+ to offer an objection to him, he had at once recourse to his fists, and
+ any reference to the law put him into a state of frenzy. "The town," he
+ was wont to say on such occasions, "has been entrusted to me by his
+ Majesty, and you dare to talk to me of the law? There is the law for you!"&mdash;the
+ remark being accompanied with a blow. Another officer of the same type,
+ long resident in Kief, had a somewhat different method of maintaining
+ order. He habitually drove about the town with a Cossack escort, and when
+ any one of the lower classes had the misfortune to displease him, he
+ ordered one of his Cossacks to apply a little corporal punishment on the
+ spot without any legal formalities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Justice of Peace Courts things were conducted in a very different
+ style. The justice, always scrupulously polite without distinction of
+ persons, listened patiently to the complaint, tried to arrange the affairs
+ amicably, and when his efforts failed, gave his decision at once according
+ to law and common-sense. No attention was paid to rank or social position.
+ A general who would not attend to the police regulations was fined like an
+ ordinary workingman, and in a dispute between a great dignitary and a man
+ of the people the two were treated in precisely the same way. No wonder
+ such courts became popular among the masses; and their popularity was
+ increased when it became known that the affairs were disposed of
+ expeditiously, without unnecessary formalities and without any bribes or
+ blackmail. Many peasants regarded the justice as they had been wont to
+ regard kindly proprietors of the old patriarchal type, and brought their
+ griefs and sorrows to him in the hope that he would somehow alleviate
+ them. Often they submitted most intimate domestic and matrimonial concerns
+ of which no court could possibly take cognisance, and sometimes they
+ demanded the fulfilment of contracts which were in flagrant contradiction
+ not only with the written law, but also with ordinary morality.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Many curious instances of this have come to my knowledge,
+ but they are of such a kind that they cannot be quoted in a
+ work intended for the general public.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Of course, the courts were not entirely without blemishes. In the matter,
+ for example, of making no distinction of persons some of the early
+ justices, in seeking to avoid Scylla, came dangerously near to Charybdis.
+ Imagining that their mission was to eradicate the conceptions and habits
+ which had been created and fostered by serfage, they sometimes used their
+ authority for giving lessons in philanthropic liberalism, and took a
+ malicious delight in wounding the susceptibilities, and occasionally even
+ the material interests, of those whom they regarded as enemies to the good
+ cause. In disputes between master and servant, or between employer and
+ workmen, the justice of this type considered it his duty to resist the
+ tyranny of capital, and was apt to forget his official character of judge
+ in his assumed character of social reformer. Happily these aberrations on
+ the part of the justices are already things of the past, but they helped
+ to bring about a reaction, as we shall see presently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The extreme popularity of the Justice of Peace Courts did not last very
+ long. Their history resembled that of the Zemstvo and many other new
+ institutions in Russia&mdash;at first, enthusiasm and inordinate
+ expectations; then consciousness of defects and practical inconveniences;
+ and, lastly, in an influential section of the public, the pessimism of
+ shattered illusions, accompanied by the adoption of a reactionary policy
+ on the part of the Government. The discontent appeared first among the
+ so-called privileged classes. To people who had all their lives enjoyed
+ great social consideration it seemed monstrous that they should be treated
+ exactly in the same way as the muzhik; and when a general who was
+ accustomed to be addressed as "Your Excellency," was accused of using
+ abusive language to his cook, and found himself seated on the same bench
+ with the menial, he naturally supposed that the end of all things was at
+ hand; or perhaps a great civil official, who was accustomed to regard the
+ police as created merely for the lower classes, suddenly found himself, to
+ his inexpressible astonishment, fined for a contravention of police
+ regulations! Naturally the justices were accused of dangerous
+ revolutionary tendencies, and when they happened to bring to light some
+ injustice on the part of the tchinovnik they were severely condemned for
+ undermining the prestige of the Imperial authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a time the accusations provoked merely a smile or a caustic remark
+ among the Liberals, but about the middle of the eighties criticisms began
+ to appear even in the Liberal Press. No very grave allegations were made,
+ but defects in the system and miscarriages of justice were put forward and
+ severely commented upon. Occasionally it happened that a justice was
+ indolent, or that at the Sessions in a small country town it was
+ impossible to form a quorum on the appointed day. Overlooking the good
+ features of the institution and the good services rendered by it, the
+ critics began to propose partial reorganisation in the sense of greater
+ control by central authorities. It was suggested, for example, that the
+ President of Sessions should be appointed by the Government, that the
+ justices should be subordinated to the Regular Tribunals, and that the
+ principle of election by the Zemstvo should be abolished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These complaints were not at all unwelcome to the Government, because it
+ had embarked on a reactionary policy, and in 1889 it suddenly granted to
+ the critics a great deal more than they desired. In the rural districts of
+ Central Russia the justices were replaced by the rural supervisors, of
+ whom I have spoken in a previous chapter, and the part of their functions
+ which could not well be entrusted to those new officials was transferred
+ to judges of the Regular Courts. In some of the larger towns and in the
+ rural districts of outlying provinces the justices were preserved, but
+ instead of being elected by the Zemstvo they were nominated by the
+ Government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The regular Tribunals likewise became acclimatised in an incredibly short
+ space of time. The first judges were not by any means profound jurists,
+ and were too often deficient in that dispassionate calmness which we are
+ accustomed to associate with the Bench; but they were at least honest,
+ educated men, and generally possessed a fair knowledge of the law. Their
+ defects were due to the fact that the demand for trained jurists far
+ exceeded the supply, and the Government was forced to nominate men who
+ under ordinary circumstances would never have thought of presenting
+ themselves as candidates. At the beginning of 1870, in the 32 "Tribunaux
+ d'Arrondissement" which then existed, there were 227 judges, of whom 44
+ had never received a juridical education. Even the presidents had not all
+ passed through a school of law. Of course the courts could not become
+ thoroughly effective until all the judges were men who had received a good
+ special education and had a practical acquaintance with judicial matters.
+ This has now been effected, and the present generation of judges are
+ better prepared and more capable than their predecessors. On the score of
+ probity I have never heard any complaints.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the judicial innovations, perhaps the most interesting is the jury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the time of the reforms the introduction of the jury into the judicial
+ organisation awakened among the educated classes a great amount of
+ sentimental enthusiasm. The institution had the reputation of being
+ "liberal," and was known to be approved of by the latest authorities in
+ criminal jurisprudence. This was sufficient to insure it a favourable
+ reception, and to excite most exaggerated expectations as to its
+ beneficent influence. Ten years of experience somewhat cooled this
+ enthusiasm, and voices might be heard declaring that the introduction of
+ the jury was a mistake. The Russian people, it was held, was not yet ripe
+ for such an institution, and numerous anecdotes were related in support of
+ this opinion. One jury, for instance, was said to have returned a verdict
+ of "NOT guilty with extenuating circumstances"; and another, being unable
+ to come to a decision, was reported to have cast lots before an Icon, and
+ to have given a verdict in accordance with the result! Besides this,
+ juries often gave a verdict of "not guilty" when the accused made a full
+ and formal confession to the court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How far the comic anecdotes are true I do not undertake to decide, but I
+ venture to assert that such incidents, if they really occur, are too few
+ to form the basis of a serious indictment. The fact, however, that juries
+ often acquit prisoners who openly confess their crime is beyond all
+ possibility of doubt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To most Englishmen this fact will probably seem sufficient to prove that
+ the introduction of the institution was at least premature, but before
+ adopting this sweeping conclusion it will be well to examine the
+ phenomenon a little more closely in connection with Russian criminal
+ procedure as a whole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In England the Bench is allowed very great latitude in fixing the amount
+ of punishment. The jury can therefore confine themselves to the question
+ of fact and leave to the judge the appreciation of extenuating
+ circumstances. In Russia the position of the jury is different. The
+ Russian criminal law fixes minutely the punishment for each category of
+ crimes, and leaves almost no latitude to the judge. The jury know that if
+ they give a verdict of guilty, the prisoner will inevitably be punished
+ according to the Code. Now the Code, borrowed in great part from foreign
+ legislation, is founded on conceptions very different from those of the
+ Russian people, and in many cases it attaches heavy penalties to acts
+ which the ordinary Russian is wont to regard as mere peccadilloes, or
+ positively justifiable. Even in those matters in which the Code is in
+ harmony with the popular morality, there are many exceptional cases in
+ which summum jus is really summa injuria. Suppose, for instance&mdash;as
+ actually happened in a case which came under my notice&mdash;that a fire
+ breaks out in a village, and that the Village Elder, driven out of
+ patience by the apathy and laziness of some of his young fellow-villagers,
+ oversteps the limits of his authority as defined by law, and accompanies
+ his reproaches and exhortations with a few lusty blows. Surely such a man
+ is not guilty of a very heinous crime&mdash;certainly he is not in the
+ opinion of the peasantry&mdash;and yet if he be prosecuted and convicted
+ he inevitably falls into the jaws of an article of the Code which condemns
+ to transportation for a long term of years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In such cases what is the jury to do? In England they might safely give a
+ verdict of guilty, and leave the judge to take into consideration all the
+ extenuating circumstances; but in Russia they cannot act in this way, for
+ they know that the judge must condemn the prisoner according to the
+ Criminal Code. There remains, therefore, but one issue out of the
+ difficulty&mdash;a verdict of acquittal; and Russian juries&mdash;to their
+ honour be it said&mdash;generally adopt this alternative. Thus the jury,
+ in those cases in which it is most severely condemned, provides a
+ corrective for the injustice of the criminal legislation. Occasionally, it
+ is true, they go a little too far in this direction and arrogate to
+ themselves a right of pardon, but cases of that kind are, I believe, very
+ rare. I know of only one well-authenticated instance. The prisoner had
+ been proved guilty of a serious crime, but it happened to be the eve of a
+ great religious festival, and the jury thought that in pardoning the
+ prisoner and giving a verdict of acquittal they would be acting as good
+ Christians!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The legislation regards, of course, this practice as an abuse, and has
+ tried to prevent it by concealing as far as possible from the jury the
+ punishment that awaits the accused if he be condemned. For this purpose it
+ forbids the counsel for the prisoner to inform the jury what punishment is
+ prescribed by the Code for the crime in question. This ingenious device
+ not only fails in its object, but has sometimes a directly opposite
+ effect. Not knowing what the punishment will be, and fearing that it may
+ be out of all proportion to the crime, the jury sometimes acquit a
+ criminal whom they would condemn if they knew what punishment would be
+ inflicted. And when a jury is, as it were, entrapped, and finds that the
+ punishment is more severe than it supposed, it can take its revenge in the
+ succeeding cases. I know at least of one instance of this kind. A jury
+ convicted a prisoner of an offence which it regarded as very trivial, but
+ which in reality entailed, according to the Code, seven years of penal
+ servitude! So surprised and frightened were the jurymen by this unexpected
+ consequence of their verdict, that they obstinately acquitted, in the face
+ of the most convincing evidence, all the other prisoners brought before
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most famous case of acquital when there was no conceivable doubt as to
+ the guilt of the accused was that of Vera Zasulitch, who shot General
+ Trepof, Prefect of St. Petersburg; but the circumstances were so peculiar
+ that they will hardly support any general conclusion. I happened to be
+ present, and watched the proceedings closely. Vera Zasulitch, a young
+ woman who had for some time taken part in the revolutionary movement,
+ heard that a young revolutionist called Bogoliubof, imprisoned in St.
+ Petersburg, had been flogged by orders of General Trepof,* and though she
+ did not know the victim personally she determined to avenge the indignity
+ to which he had been subjected. With this intention she appeared at the
+ Prefecture, ostensibly for the purpose of presenting a petition, and when
+ she found herself in the presence of the Prefect she fired a revolver at
+ him, wounding him seriously, but not mortally. At the trial the main facts
+ were not disputed, and yet the jury brought in a verdict of not guilty.
+ This unexpected result was due, I believe, partly to a desire to make a
+ little political demonstration, and partly to a strong suspicion that the
+ prison authorities, in carrying out the Prefect's orders, had acted in
+ summary fashion without observing the tedious formalities prescribed by
+ the law. Certainly one of the prison officials, when under
+ cross-examination, made on me, and on the public generally, the impression
+ that he was prevaricating in order to shield his superiors.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The reason alleged by General Trepof for giving these
+ orders was that, during a visit of inspection, Bogoliubof
+ had behaved disrespectfully towards him, and had thereby
+ committed an infraction of prison discipline, for which the
+ law prescribes the use of corporal punishment.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At the close of the proceedings, which were dexterously conducted by
+ Counsel in such a way that, as the Emperor is reported to have said, it
+ was not Vera Zasulitch but General Trepof who was being tried, an eminent
+ Russian journalist rushed up to me in a state of intense excitement and
+ said: "Is not this a great day for the cause of political freedom in
+ Russia?" I could not agree with him and I ventured to predict that neither
+ of us would ever again see a political case tried publicly by jury in an
+ ordinary court. The prediction has proved true. Since that time political
+ offenders have been tried by special tribunals without a jury or dealt
+ with "by administrative procedure," that is to say, inquisitorially,
+ without any regular trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The defects, real and supposed, of the present system are commonly
+ attributed to the predominance of the peasant element in the juries; and
+ this opinion, founded on a priori reasoning, seems to many too evident to
+ require verification. The peasantry are in many respects the most ignorant
+ class, and therefore, it is assumed, they are least capable of weighing
+ conflicting evidence. Plain and conclusive as this reasoning seems, it is
+ in my opinion erroneous. The peasants have, indeed, little education, but
+ they have a large fund of plain common-sense; and experience proves&mdash;so
+ at least I have been informed by many judges and Public Prosecutors&mdash;that,
+ as a general rule, a peasant jury is more to be relied on than a jury
+ drawn from the educated classes. It must be admitted, however, that a
+ peasant jury has certain peculiarities, and it is not a little interesting
+ to observe what those peculiarities are.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first place, a jury composed of peasants generally acts in a
+ somewhat patriarchal fashion, and does not always confine its attention to
+ the evidence and the arguments adduced at the trial. The members form
+ their judgment as men do in the affairs of ordinary life, and are sure to
+ be greatly influenced by any jurors who happen to be personally acquainted
+ with the prisoner. If several of the jurors know him to be a bad
+ character, he has little chance of being acquitted, even though the chain
+ of evidence against him should not be quite perfect. Peasants cannot
+ understand why a notorious scoundrel should be allowed to escape because a
+ little link in the evidence is wanting, or because some little judicial
+ formality has not been duly observed. Indeed, their ideas of criminal
+ procedure in general are extremely primitive. The Communal method of
+ dealing with malefactors is best in accordance with their conceptions of
+ well-regulated society. The Mir may, by a Communal decree and without a
+ formal trial, have any of its unruly members transported to Siberia! This
+ summary, informal mode of procedure seems to the peasants very
+ satisfactory. They are at a loss to understand how a notorious culprit is
+ allowed to "buy" an advocate to defend him, and are very insensible to the
+ bought advocate's eloquence. To many of them, if I may trust to
+ conversations which I have casually overheard in and around the courts,
+ "buying an advocate" seems to be very much the same kind of operation as
+ bribing a judge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the second place, the peasants, when acting as jurors, are very severe
+ with regard to crimes against property. In this they are instigated by the
+ simple instinct of self-defence. They are, in fact, continually at the
+ mercy of thieves and malefactors. They live in wooden houses easily set on
+ fire; their stables might be broken into by a child; at night the village
+ is guarded merely by an old man, who cannot be in more than one place at a
+ time, and in the one place he is apt to go to sleep; a police officer is
+ rarely seen, except when a crime has actually been committed. A few clever
+ horse-stealers may ruin many families, and a fire-raiser, in his desire to
+ avenge himself on an enemy, may reduce a whole village to destitution.
+ These and similar considerations tend to make the peasants very severe
+ against theft, robbery, and arson; and a Public Prosecutor who desires to
+ obtain a conviction against a man charged with one of these crimes
+ endeavours to have a jury in which the peasant class is largely
+ represented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to fraud in its various forms, the peasants are much more
+ lenient, probably because the line of demarcation between honest and
+ dishonest dealing in commercial affairs is not very clearly drawn in their
+ minds. Many, for instance, are convinced that trade cannot be successfully
+ carried on without a little clever cheating; and hence cheating is
+ regarded as a venial offence. If the money fraudulently acquired be
+ restored to the owner, the crime is supposed to be completely condoned.
+ Thus when a Volost Elder appropriates the public money, and succeeds in
+ repaying it before the case comes on for trial, he is invariably acquitted&mdash;and
+ sometimes even re-elected!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An equal leniency is generally shown by peasants towards crimes against
+ the person, such as assaults, cruelty, and the like. This fact is easily
+ explained. Refined sensitiveness and a keen sympathy with physical
+ suffering are the result of a certain amount of material well-being,
+ together with a certain degree of intellectual and moral culture, and
+ neither of these is yet possessed by the Russian peasantry. Any one who
+ has had opportunities of frequently observing the peasants must have been
+ often astonished by their indifference to suffering, both in their own
+ persons and in the person of others. In a drunken brawl heads may be
+ broken and wounds inflicted without any interference on the part of the
+ spectators. If no fatal consequences ensue, the peasant does not think it
+ necessary that official notice should be taken of the incident, and
+ certainly does not consider that any of the combatants should be
+ transported to Siberia. Slight wounds heal of their own accord without any
+ serious loss to the sufferer, and therefore the man who inflicts them is
+ not to be put on the same level as the criminal who reduces a family to
+ beggary. This reasoning may, perhaps, shock people of sensitive nerves,
+ but it undeniably contains a certain amount of plain, homely wisdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all kinds of cruelty, that which is perhaps most revolting to civilised
+ mankind is the cruelty of the husband towards his wife; but to this crime
+ the Russian peasant shows especial leniency. He is still influenced by the
+ old conceptions of the husband's rights, and by that low estimate of the
+ weaker sex which finds expression in many popular proverbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The peculiar moral conceptions reflected in these facts are evidently the
+ result of external conditions, and not of any recondite ethnographical
+ peculiarities, for they are not found among the merchants, who are nearly
+ all of peasant origin. On the contrary, the merchants are more severe with
+ regard to crimes against the person than with regard to crimes against
+ property. The explanation of this is simple. The merchant has means of
+ protecting his property, and if he should happen to suffer by theft, his
+ fortune is not likely to be seriously affected by it. On the other hand,
+ he has a certain sensitiveness with regard to such crimes as assault; for
+ though he has commonly not much more intellectual and moral culture than
+ the peasant, he is accustomed to comfort and material well-being, which
+ naturally develop sensitiveness regarding physical pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards fraud the merchants are quite as lenient as the peasantry. This
+ may, perhaps, seem strange, for fraudulent practices are sure in the long
+ run to undermine trade. The Russian merchants, however, have not yet
+ arrived at this conception, and can point to many of the richest members
+ of their class as a proof that fraudulent practices often create enormous
+ fortunes. Long ago Samuel Butler justly remarked that we damn the sins we
+ have no mind to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the external conditions have little or no influence on the religious
+ conceptions of the merchants and the peasantry, the two classes are
+ equally severe with regard to those acts which are regarded as crimes
+ against the Deity. Hence acquittals in cases of sacrilege, blasphemy, and
+ the like never occur unless the jury is in part composed of educated men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In their decisions, as in their ordinary modes of thought, the jurors
+ drawn from the educated classes are little, if at all, affected by
+ theological conceptions, but they are sometimes influenced in a not less
+ unfortunate way by conceptions of a different order. It may happen, for
+ instance, that a juror who had passed through one of the higher
+ educational establishments has his own peculiar theory about the value of
+ evidence, or he is profoundly impressed with the idea that it is better
+ that a thousand guilty men should escape than that one innocent man should
+ be punished, or he is imbued with sentimental pseudo-philanthropy, or he
+ is convinced that punishments are useless because they neither cure the
+ delinquent nor deter others from crime; in a word, he may have in some way
+ or other lost his mental balance in that moral chaos through which Russia
+ is at present passing. In England, France, or Germany such an individual
+ would have little influence on his fellow-jurymen, for in these countries
+ there are very few people who allow new paradoxical ideas to overturn
+ their traditional notions and obscure their common-sense; but in Russia,
+ where even the elementary moral conceptions are singularly unstable and
+ pliable, a man of this type may succeed in leading a jury. More than once
+ I have heard men boast of having induced their fellow-jurymen to acquit
+ every prisoner brought before them, not because they believed the
+ prisoners to be innocent or the evidence to be insufficient, but because
+ all punishments are useless and barbarous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One word in conclusion regarding the independence and political
+ significance of the new courts. When the question of judicial reform was
+ first publicly raised many people hoped that the new courts would receive
+ complete autonomy and real independence, and would thus form a foundation
+ for political liberty. These hopes, like so many illusions of that strange
+ time, have not been realised. A large measure of autonomy and independence
+ was indeed granted in theory. The law laid down the principle that no
+ judge could be removed unless convicted of a definite crime, and that the
+ courts should present candidates for all the vacant places on the Bench;
+ but these and similar rights have little practical significance. If the
+ Minister cannot depose a judge, he can deprive him of all possibility of
+ receiving promotion, and he can easily force him in an indirect way to
+ send in his resignation; and if the courts have still the right to present
+ candidates for vacant places, the Minister has also this right, and can,
+ of course, always secure the nomination of his own candidate. By the
+ influence of that centripetal force which exists in all centralised
+ bureaucracies, the Procureurs have become more important personages than
+ the Presidents of the courts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the political point of view the question of the independence of the
+ Courts has not yet acquired much practical importance, because the
+ Government can always have political offenders tried by a special tribunal
+ or can send them to Siberia for an indefinite term of years without
+ regular trial by the "administrative procedure" to which I have above
+ referred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0034" id="link2HCH0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ REVOLUTIONARY NIHILISM AND THE REACTION
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The Reform-enthusiasm Becomes Unpractical and Culminates in Nihilism&mdash;Nihilism,
+ the Distorted Reflection of Academic Western Socialism&mdash;Russia Well
+ Prepared for Reception of Ultra-Socialist Virus&mdash;Social
+ Reorganisation According to Latest Results of Science&mdash;Positivist
+ Theory&mdash;Leniency of Press-censure&mdash;Chief Representatives of New
+ Movement&mdash;Government Becomes Alarmed&mdash;Repressive Measures&mdash;Reaction
+ in the Public&mdash;The Term Nihilist Invented&mdash;The Nihilist and His
+ Theory&mdash;Further Repressive Measures&mdash;Attitude of Landed
+ Proprietors&mdash;Foundation of a Liberal Party&mdash;Liberalism Checked
+ by Polish Insurrection&mdash;Practical Reform Continued&mdash;An Attempt
+ at Regicide Forms a Turning-point of Government's Policy&mdash;Change in
+ Educational System&mdash;Decline of Nihilism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rapidly increasing enthusiasm for reform did not confine itself to
+ practical measures such as the emancipation of the serfs, the creation of
+ local self-government, and the thorough reorganisation of the law-courts
+ and legal procedure. In the younger section of the educated classes, and
+ especially among the students of the universities and technical colleges,
+ it produced a feverish intellectual excitement and wild aspirations which
+ culminated in what is commonly known as Nihilism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a preceding chapter I pointed out that during the last two centuries
+ all the important intellectual movements in Western Europe have been
+ reflected in Russia, and that these reflections have generally been what
+ may fairly be termed exaggerated and distorted reproductions of the
+ originals.* Roughly speaking, the Nihilist movement in Russia may be
+ described as the exaggerated, distorted reflection of the earlier
+ Socialist movements of the West; but it has local peculiarities and local
+ colouring which deserve attention.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * See Chapter XXVI.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Russian educated classes had been well prepared by their past history
+ for the reception and rapid development of the Socialist virus. For a
+ century and a half the country had been subjected to a series of drastic
+ changes, administrative and social, by the energetic action of the
+ Autocratic Power, with little spontaneous co-operation on the part of the
+ people. In a nation with such a history, Socialistic ideas naturally found
+ favour, because all Socialist systems until quite recent times were
+ founded on the assumption that political and social progress must be the
+ result not of slow natural development, but rather of philosophic
+ speculation, legislative wisdom, and administrative energy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This assumption lay at the bottom of the reform enthusiasm in St.
+ Petersburg at the commencement of Alexander II.'s reign. Russia might be
+ radically transformed, it was thought, politically and socially, according
+ to abstract scientific principles, in the space of a few years, and be
+ thereby raised to the level of West-European civilisation, or even higher.
+ The older nations had for centuries groped in darkness, or stumbled along
+ in the faint light of practical experience, and consequently their
+ progress had been slow and uncertain. For Russia there was no necessity to
+ follow such devious, unexplored paths. She ought to profit by the
+ experience of her elder sisters, and avoid the errors into which they had
+ fallen. Nor was it difficult to ascertain what these errors were, because
+ they had been discovered, examined and explained by the most eminent
+ thinkers of France and England, and efficient remedies had been
+ prescribed. Russian reformers had merely to study and apply the
+ conclusions at which these eminent authorities had arrived, and their task
+ would be greatly facilitated by the fact that they could operate on virgin
+ soil, untrammelled by the feudal traditions, religious superstitions,
+ metaphysical conceptions, romantic illusions, aristocratic prejudices, and
+ similar obstacles to social and political progress which existed in
+ Western Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the extraordinary intellectual atmosphere in which the Russian
+ educated classes lived during the early years of the sixties. On the "men
+ with aspirations," who had longed in vain for more light and more public
+ activity under the obscurantist, repressive regime of the preceding reign,
+ it had an intoxicating effect. The more excitable and sanguine amongst
+ them now believed seriously that they had discovered a convenient
+ short-cut to national prosperity, and that for Russia a grandiose social
+ and political millennium was at hand.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * I was not myself in St. Petersburg at that period, but on
+ arriving a few years afterwards I became intimately
+ acquainted with men and women who had lived through it, and
+ who still retained much of their early enthusiasm.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In these circumstances it is not surprising that one of the most prominent
+ characteristics of the time was a boundless, child-like faith in the
+ so-called "latest results of science." Infallible science was supposed to
+ have found the solution of all political and social problems. What a
+ reformer had to do&mdash;and who was not a would-be reformer in those
+ days?&mdash;was merely to study the best authorities. Their works had been
+ long rigidly excluded by the Press censure, but now that it was possible
+ to obtain them, they were read with avidity. Chief among the new,
+ infallible prophets whose works were profoundly venerated was Auguste
+ Comte, the inventor of Positivism. In his classification of the sciences
+ the crowning of the edifice was sociology, which taught how to organise
+ human society on scientific principles. Russia had merely to adopt the
+ principles laid down and expounded at great length in the Cours de
+ Philosophie Positive. There Comte explained that humanity had to pass
+ through three stages of intellectual development&mdash;the religious, the
+ metaphysical, and the positive&mdash;and that the most advanced nations,
+ after spending centuries in the two first, were entering on the third.
+ Russia must endeavour, therefore, to get into the positive stage as
+ quickly as possible, and there was reason to believe that, in consequence
+ of certain ethnographical and historical peculiarities, she could make the
+ transition more quickly than other nations. After Comte's works, the book
+ which found, for a time, most favour was Buckle's "History of
+ Civilisation," which seemed to reduce history and progress to a matter of
+ statistics, and which laid down the principle that progress is always in
+ the inverse ratio of the influence of theological conceptions. This
+ principle was regarded as of great practical importance, and the
+ conclusion drawn from it was that rapid national progress was certain if
+ only the influence of religion and theology could be destroyed. Very
+ popular, too, was John Stuart Mill, because he was "imbued with enthusiasm
+ for humanity and female emancipation"; and in his tract on Utilitarianism
+ he showed that morality was simply the crystallised experience of many
+ generations as to what was most conducive to the greatest good of the
+ greatest number. The minor prophets of the time, among whom Buchner
+ occupied a prominent place, are too numerous to mention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strange to say, the newest and most advanced doctrines appeared regularly,
+ under a very thin and transparent veil, in the St. Petersburg daily Press,
+ and especially in the thick monthly magazines, which were as big as, or
+ bigger than, our venerable quarterlies. The art of writing and reading
+ "between the lines," not altogether unknown under the Draconian regime of
+ Nicholas I., was now developed to such a marvellous extent that almost any
+ thing could be written clearly enough to be understood by the initiated
+ without calling for the thunderbolts of the Press censors, which was now
+ only intermittently severe. Indeed, the Press censors themselves were
+ sometimes carried away by the reform enthusiasm. One of them long
+ afterwards related to me that during "the mad time," as he called it, in
+ the course of a single year he had received from his superiors no less
+ than seventeen reprimands for passing objectionable articles without
+ remark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The movement found its warmest partisans among the students and young
+ literary men, but not a few grey-beards were to be found among the
+ youthful apostles. All who read the periodical literature became more or
+ less imbued with the new spirit; but it must be presumed that many of
+ those who discoursed most eloquently had no clear idea of what they were
+ talking about; for even at a later date, when the novices had had time to
+ acquaint themselves with the doctrines they professed, I often encountered
+ the most astounding ignorance. Let me give one instance by way of
+ illustration:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A young gentleman who was in the habit of talking glibly about the
+ necessity of scientifically reorganising human society, declared to me one
+ day that not only sociology, but also biology should be taken into
+ consideration. Confessing my complete ignorance of the latter science, I
+ requested him to enlighten me by giving me an instance of a biological
+ principle which could be applied to social regeneration. He looked
+ confused, and tried to ride out of the difficulty on vague general
+ phrases; but I persistently kept him to the point, and maliciously
+ suggested that as an alternative he might cite to me a biological
+ principle which could NOT be used for such a purpose. Again he failed, and
+ it became evident to all present that of biology, about which he talked so
+ often, he knew absolutely nothing but the name! After this I frequently
+ employed the same pseudo-Socratic method of discussion, and very often
+ with a similar result. Not one in fifty, perhaps, ever attempted to reduce
+ the current hazy conceptions to a concrete form. The enthusiasm was not
+ the less intense, however, on that account.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first the partisans of the movement seemed desirous of assisting,
+ rather than of opposing or undermining the Government, and so long as they
+ merely talked academically about scientific principles and similar vague
+ entities, the Government felt no necessity for energetic interference; but
+ as early as 1861 symptoms of a change in the character of the movement
+ became apparent. A secret society of officers organised a small
+ printing-press in the building of the Headquarters Staff and issued
+ clandestinely three numbers of a periodical called the Velikoruss (Great
+ Russian), which advocated administrative reform, the convocation of a
+ constituent assembly, and the emancipation of Poland from Russian rule. A
+ few months later (April, 1862) a seditious proclamation appeared,
+ professing to emanate from a central revolutionary committee, and
+ declaring that the Romanoffs must expiate with their blood the misery of
+ the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These symptoms of an underground revolutionary agitation caused alarm in
+ the official world, and repressive measures were at once adopted. Sunday
+ schools for the working classes, reading-rooms, students' clubs, and
+ similar institutions which might be used for purposes of revolutionary
+ propaganda were closed; several trials for political offences took place;
+ the most popular of the monthly periodicals (Sovremennik) was suspended,
+ and its editor, Tchernishevski, arrested. There was nothing to show that
+ Tchernishevski was implicated in any treasonable designs, but he was
+ undoubtedly the leader of a group of youthful writers whose aspirations
+ went far beyond the intentions of the Government, and it was thought
+ desirable to counteract his influence by shutting him up in prison. Here
+ he wrote and published, with the permission of the authorities and the
+ imprimatur of the Press censure, a novel called "Shto delat'?" ("What is
+ to be Done?"), which was regarded at first as a most harmless production,
+ but which is now considered one of the most influential and baneful works
+ in the whole range of Nihilist literature. As a novel it had no
+ pretensions to artistic merit, and in ordinary times it would have
+ attracted little or no attention, but it put into concrete shape many of
+ the vague Socialist and Communist notions that were at the moment floating
+ about in the intellectual atmosphere, and it came to be looked upon by the
+ young enthusiasts as a sort of informal manifesto of their new-born faith.
+ It was divided into two parts; in the first was described a group of
+ students living according to the new ideas in open defiance of traditional
+ conventionalities, and in the second was depicted a village organised on
+ the communistic principles recommended by Fourier. The first was supposed
+ to represent the dawn of the new era; the second, the goal to be
+ ultimately attained. When the authorities discovered the mistake they had
+ committed in allowing the book to be published, it was at once confiscated
+ and withdrawn from circulation, whilst the author, after being tried by
+ the Senate, was exiled to Northeastern Siberia and kept there for nearly
+ twenty years.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Tchernishevski was a man of encyclopaedic knowledge and
+ specially conversant with political economy. According to
+ the testimony of those who knew him intimately, he was one
+ of the ablest and most sympathetic men of his generation.
+ During his exile a bold attempt was made to rescue him, and
+ very nearly succeeded. A daring youth, disguised as an
+ officer of gendarmes and provided with forged official
+ papers, reached the place where he was confined and procured
+ his release, but the officer in charge had vague suspicions,
+ and insisted on the two travellers being escorted to the
+ next post-station by a couple of Cossacks. The rescuer
+ tried to get rid of the escort by means of his revolver, but
+ he failed in the attempt, and the fugitives were arrested.
+ In 1883 Tchernishevski was transferred to the milder climate
+ of Astrakhan, and in 1889 he was allowed to return to his
+ native town, Saratof, where he died a few months afterwards.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ With the arrest and exile of Tchernishevski the young would-be reformers
+ were constrained to recognise that they had no chance of carrying the
+ Government with them in their endeavours to realise their patriotic
+ aspirations. Police supervision over the young generation was increased,
+ and all kinds of association, whether for mutual instruction, mutual aid,
+ or any other purpose, were discouraged or positively forbidden. And it was
+ not merely in the mind of the police that suspicion was aroused. In the
+ opinion of the great majority of moderate, respectable people the young
+ enthusiasts were becoming discredited. The violently seditious
+ proclamations with which they were supposed to sympathise, and a series of
+ destructive fires in St. Petersburg, erroneously attributed to them,
+ frightened timid Liberals and gave the Reactionaries, who had hitherto
+ remained silent, an opportunity of preaching their doctrines with telling
+ effect. The celebrated novelist, Turgeneif, long the idol of the young
+ generation, had inadvertently in "Fathers and Children" invented the term
+ Nihilist, and it at once came to be applied as an opprobrious epithet,
+ notwithstanding the efforts of Pissaref, a popular writer of remarkable
+ talent, to prove to the public that it ought to be regarded as a term of
+ honour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pissaref's attempt at rehabilitation made no impression outside of his own
+ small circle. According to popular opinion the Nihilists were a band of
+ fanatical young men and women, mostly medical students, who had determined
+ to turn the world upside down and to introduce a new kind of social order,
+ founded on the most advanced principles of social equality and Communism.
+ As a first step towards the great transformation they had reversed the
+ traditional order of things in the matter of coiffure: the males allowed
+ their hair to grow long, and the female adepts cut their hair short,
+ adding occasionally the additional badge of blue spectacles. Their unkempt
+ appearance naturally shocked the aesthetic feelings of ordinary people,
+ but to this they were indifferent. They had raised themselves above the
+ level of popular notions, took no account of so-called public opinion,
+ gloried in Bohemianism, despised Philistine respectability, and rather
+ liked to scandalise old-fashioned people imbued with antiquated
+ prejudices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the ridiculous side of the movement, but underneath the
+ absurdities there was something serious. These young men and women, who
+ were themselves terribly in earnest, were systematically hostile not only
+ to accepted conventionalities in the matter of dress, but to all manner of
+ shams, hypocrisy, and cant in the broad Carlylean sense of those terms. To
+ the "beautiful souls" of the older generation, who had habitually, in
+ conversation and literature, shed pathetic tears over the defects of
+ Russian social and political organisation without ever moving a finger to
+ correct them&mdash;especially the landed proprietors who talked and wrote
+ about civilisation, culture, and justice while living comfortably on the
+ revenues provided for them by their unfortunate serfs&mdash;these had the
+ strongest aversion; and this naturally led them to condemn in strong
+ language the worship of aesthetic culture. But here again they fell into
+ exaggeration. Professing extreme utilitarianism, they explained that the
+ humble shoemaker who practises his craft diligently is, in the true sense,
+ a greater man than a Shakespeare, or a Goethe, because humanity has more
+ need of shoes than of dramas and poetry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such silly paradoxes provoked, of course, merely a smile of compassion;
+ what alarmed the sensible, respectable "Philistine" was the method of
+ cleansing the Augean stable recommended by these enthusiasts. Having
+ discovered in the course of their desultory reading that most of the ills
+ that flesh is heir to proceed directly or indirectly from uncontrolled
+ sexual passion and the lust of gain, they proposed to seal hermetically
+ these two great sources of crime and misery by abolishing the
+ old-fashioned institutions of marriage and private property. When society,
+ they argued, should be so organised that all the healthy instincts of
+ human nature could find complete and untrammelled satisfaction, there
+ would be no motive or inducement for committing crimes or misdemeanours.
+ For thousands of years humanity had been sailing on a wrong tack. The
+ great law-givers of the world, religious and civil, in their ignorance of
+ physical science and positivist methods, had created institutions,
+ commonly known as law and morality, which were utterly unfitted to human
+ nature, and then the magistrate and the moralist had endeavoured to compel
+ or persuade men and women to conform to them, but their efforts had failed
+ most signally. In vain the police had threatened and punished and the
+ priests had preached and admonished. Human nature had systematically and
+ obstinately rebelled, and still rebels, against the unnatural constraint.
+ It is time, therefore, to try a new system. Instead of continuing, as has
+ been done for thousands of years, to force men and women, as it were, into
+ badly fitting, unelastic clothes which cause intense discomfort and
+ prevent all healthy muscular action, why not adapt the costume to the
+ anatomy and physiology of the human frame? Then the clothes will no longer
+ be rent, and those who wear them will be contented and happy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately for the progress of humanity there are serious obstacles in
+ the way of this radical change of system. The absurd, antiquated and
+ pernicious institutions and customs are supported by abstruse metaphysical
+ reasons and enshrined in mystical romantic sentiment, and in this way they
+ may still be preserved for generations unless the axe be laid to the root
+ of the tree. Now is the critical moment. Russia must be made to rise at
+ once from the metaphysical to the positivist stage of intellectual
+ development; metaphysical reasoning and romantic sentiment must be
+ rigorously discarded; and everything must be brought to the touchstone of
+ naked practical utility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One might naturally suppose that men holding such opinions must be
+ materialists of the grossest type&mdash;and, indeed, many of them gloried
+ in the name of materialist and atheist&mdash;but such an inference would
+ be erroneous. While denouncing metaphysics, they were themselves
+ metaphysicians in so far as they were constantly juggling with abstract
+ conceptions, and letting themselves be guided in their walk and
+ conversation by a priori deductions; while ridiculing romanticism, they
+ had romantic sentiment enough to make them sacrifice their time, their
+ property, and sometimes even their life, to the attainment of an
+ unrealisable ideal; and while congratulating themselves on having passed
+ from the religious to the positivist stage of intellectual development,
+ they frequently showed themselves animated with the spirit of the early
+ martyrs! Rarely have the strange inconsistencies of human nature been so
+ strikingly exemplified as in these unpractical, anti-religious fanatics.
+ In dealing with them I might easily, without very great exaggeration,
+ produce a most amusing caricature, but I prefer describing them as they
+ really were. A few years after the period here referred to I knew some of
+ them intimately, and I must say that, without at all sharing or
+ sympathising with their opinions, I could not help respecting them as
+ honourable, upright, quixotic men and women who had made great sacrifices
+ for their convictions. One of them whom I have specially in view at this
+ moment suffered patiently for years from the utter shipwreck of his
+ generous illusions, and when he could no longer hope to see the dawn of a
+ brighter day, he ended by committing suicide. Yet that man believed
+ himself to be a Realist, a Materialist, and a Utilitarian of the purest
+ water, and habitually professed a scathing contempt for every form of
+ romantic sentiment! In reality he was one of the best and most sympathetic
+ men I have ever known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To return from this digression. So long as the subversive opinions were
+ veiled in abstract language they raised misgivings in only a comparative
+ small circle; but when school-teachers put them into a form suited to the
+ juvenile mind, they were apt to produce startling effects. In a satirical
+ novel of the time a little girl is represented as coming to her mother and
+ saying, "Little mamma! Maria Ivan'na (our new school-mistress) says there
+ is no God and no Tsar, and that it is wrong to marry!" Whether such
+ incidents actually occurred in real life, as several friends assured me, I
+ am not prepared to say, but certainly people believed that they might
+ occur in their own families, and that was quite sufficient to produce
+ alarm even in the ranks of the Liberals, to say nothing of the rapidly
+ increasing army of the Reactionaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To illustrate the general uneasiness produced in St. Petersburg, I may
+ quote here a letter written in October, 1861, by a man who occupied one of
+ the highest positions in the Administration. As he had the reputation of
+ being an ultra-Liberal who sympathised overmuch with Young Russia, we may
+ assume that he did not take an exceptionally alarmist view of the
+ situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have not been long absent&mdash;merely a few months; but if you
+ returned now, you would be astonished by the progress which the
+ Opposition, one might say the Revolutionary Party, has already made. The
+ disorders in the university do not concern merely the students. I see in
+ the affair the beginning of serious dangers for public tranquillity and
+ the existing order of things. Young people, without distinction of
+ costume, uniform and origin, take part in the street demonstrations.
+ Besides the students of the university, there are the students of other
+ institutions, and a mass of people who are students only in name. Among
+ these last are certain gentlemen in long beards and a number of
+ revolutionnaires in crinoline, who are of all the most fanatical. Blue
+ collars&mdash;the distinguishing mark of the students' uniform&mdash;have
+ become the signe de ralliement. Almost all the professors and many
+ officers take the part of the students. The newspaper critics openly
+ defend their colleagues. Mikhailof has been convicted of writing, printing
+ and circulating one of the most violent proclamations that ever existed,
+ under the heading, 'To the young generation!' Among the students and the
+ men of letters there is unquestionably an organised conspiracy, which has
+ perhaps leaders outside the literary circle. . . . The police are
+ powerless. They arrest any one they can lay hands on. About eighty people
+ have already been sent to the fortress and examined, but all this leads to
+ no practical result, because the revolutionary ideas have taken possession
+ of all classes, all ages, all professions, and are publicly expressed in
+ the streets, in the barracks, and in the Ministries. I believe the police
+ itself is carried away by them! What this will lead to, it is difficult to
+ predict. I am very much afraid of some bloody catastrophe. Even if it
+ should not go to such a length immediately, the position of the Government
+ will be extremely difficult. Its authority is shaken, and all are
+ convinced that it is powerless, stupid and incapable. On that point there
+ is the most perfect unanimity among all parties of all colours, even the
+ most opposite. The most desperate 'planter'* agrees in that respect with
+ the most desperate socialist. Meanwhile those who have the direction of
+ affairs do almost nothing and have no plan or definite aim in view. At
+ present the Emperor is not in the Capital, and now, more than at any other
+ time, there is complete anarchy in the absence of the master of the house.
+ There is a great deal of bustle and talk, and all blame they know not
+ whom."**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * An epithet commonly applied, at the time of the
+ Emancipation, to the partisans of serfage and the defenders
+ of the proprietors' rights.
+
+ ** I found this interesting letter (which might have been
+ written today) thirty years ago among the private papers of
+ Nicholas Milutin, who played a leading part as an official
+ in the reforms of the time. It was first published in an
+ article on "Secret Societies in Russia," which I contributed
+ to the Fortnightly Review of 1st August, 1877.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The expected revolution did not take place, but timid people had no
+ difficulty in perceiving signs of its approach. The Press continued to
+ disseminate, under a more or less disguised form, ideas which were
+ considered dangerous. The Kolokol, a Russian revolutionary paper published
+ in London by Herzen and strictly prohibited by the Press-censure, found
+ its way in large quantities into the country, and, as is recorded in an
+ earlier chapter, was read by thousands, including the higher officials and
+ the Emperor himself, who found it regularly on his writing-table, laid
+ there by some unknown hand. In St. Petersburg the arrest of Tchernishevski
+ and the suspension of his magazine, The Contemporary, made the writers a
+ little more cautious in their mode of expression, but the spirit of the
+ articles remained unchanged. These energetic intolerant leaders of public
+ opinion were novi homines not personally connected with the social strata
+ in which moderate views and retrograde tenderness had begun to prevail.
+ Mostly sons of priests or of petty officials, they belonged to a recently
+ created literary proletariat composed of young men with boundless
+ aspirations and meagre national resources, who earned a precarious
+ subsistence by journalism or by giving lessons in private families. Living
+ habitually in a world of theories and unrestrained by practical
+ acquaintance with public life, they were ready, from the purest and most
+ disinterested motives to destroy ruthlessly the existing order of things
+ in order to realise their crude notions of social regeneration. Their
+ heated imagination showed them in the near future a New Russia, composed
+ of independent federated Communes, without any bureaucracy or any central
+ power&mdash;a happy land in which everybody virtuously and automatically
+ fulfilled his public and private duties, and in which the policeman and
+ all other embodiments of material constraint were wholly superfluous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Governments are not easily converted to Utopian schemes of that idyllic
+ type, and it is not surprising that even a Government with liberal
+ humanitarian aspirations like that of Alexander II. should have become
+ alarmed and should have attempted to stem the current. What is to be
+ regretted is that the repressive measures adopted were a little too
+ Oriental in their character. Scores of young students of both sexes&mdash;for
+ the Nihilist army included a strong female contingent&mdash;were secretly
+ arrested and confined for months in unwholesome prisons, and many of them
+ were finally exiled, without any regular trial, to distant provinces in
+ European Russia or to Siberia. Their exile, it is true, was not at all so
+ terrible as is commonly supposed, because political exiles are not usually
+ confined in prisons or compelled to labour in the mines, but are obliged
+ merely to reside at a given place under police supervision. Still, such
+ punishment was severe enough for educated young men and women, especially
+ when their lot was cast among a population composed exclusively of
+ peasants and small shop-keepers or of Siberian aborigines, and when there
+ were no means of satisfying the most elementary intellectual wants. For
+ those who had no private resources the punishment was particularly severe,
+ because the Government granted merely a miserable monthly pittance, hardly
+ sufficient to purchase food of the coarsest kind, and there was rarely an
+ opportunity of adding to the meagre official allowance by intellectual or
+ manual labour. In all cases the treatment accorded to the exiles wounded
+ their sense of justice and increased the existing discontent among their
+ friends and acquaintances. Instead of acting as a deterrent, the system
+ produced a feeling of profound indignation, and ultimately transformed not
+ a few sentimental dreamers into active conspirators.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first there was no conspiracy or regularly organised secret society and
+ nothing of which the criminal law in Western Europe could have taken
+ cognisance. Students met in each other's rooms to discuss prohibited books
+ on political and social science, and occasionally short essays on the
+ subjects discussed were written in a revolutionary spirit by members of
+ the coterie. This was called mutual instruction. Between the various
+ coteries or groups there were private personal relations, not only in the
+ capital, but also in the provinces, so that manuscripts and printed papers
+ could be transmitted from one group to another. From time to time the
+ police captured these academic disquisitions, and made raids on the
+ meetings of students who had come together merely for conversation and
+ discussion; and the fresh arrests caused by these incidents increased the
+ hostility to the Government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the letter above quoted it is said that the revolutionary ideas had
+ taken possession of all classes, all ages, and all professions. This may
+ have been true with regard to St. Petersburg, but it could not have been
+ said of the provinces. There the landed proprietors were in a very
+ different frame of mind. They had to struggle with a multitude of urgent
+ practical affairs which left them little time for idyllic dreaming about
+ an imaginary millennium. Their serfs had been emancipated, and what
+ remained to them of their estates had to be reorganised on the basis of
+ free labour. Into the semi-chaotic state of things created by such
+ far-reaching changes, legal and economic, they did not wish to see any
+ more confusion introduced, and they did not at all feel that they could
+ dispense with the Central Government and the policeman. On the contrary,
+ the Central Government was urgently needed in order to obtain a little
+ ready money wherewith to reorganise the estates in the new conditions, and
+ the police organisation required to be strengthened in order to compel the
+ emancipated serfs to fulfil their legal obligations. These men and their
+ families were, therefore, much more conservative than the class commonly
+ designated "the young generation," and they naturally sympathised with the
+ "Philistines" in St. Petersburg, who had been alarmed by the exaggerations
+ of the Nihilists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even the landed proprietors, however, were not so entirely free from
+ discontent and troublesome political aspirations as the Government would
+ have desired. They had not forgotten the autocratic and bureaucratic way
+ in which the Emancipation had been prepared, and their indignation had
+ been only partially appeased by their being allowed to carry out the
+ provisions of the law without much bureaucratic interference. So much for
+ the discontent. As for the reform aspirations, they thought that, as a
+ compensation for having consented to the liberation of their serfs and for
+ having been expropriated from about a half of their land, they ought to
+ receive extensive political rights, and be admitted, like the upper
+ classes in Western Europe, to a fair share in the government of the
+ country. Unlike the fiery young Nihilists of St. Petersburg, they did not
+ want to abolish or paralyse the central power; what they wanted was to
+ co-operate with it loyally and to give their advice on important questions
+ by means of representative institutions. They formed a constitutional
+ group which exists still at the present day, as we shall see in the
+ sequel, but which has never been allowed to develop into an organised
+ political party. Its aims were so moderate that its programme might have
+ been used as a convenient safety-valve for the explosive forces which were
+ steadily accumulating under the surface of Society, but it never found
+ favour in the official world. When some of its leading members ventured to
+ hint in the Press and in loyal addresses to the Emperor that the
+ Government would do well to consult the country on important questions,
+ their respectful suggestions were coldly received or bluntly rejected by
+ the bureaucracy and the Autocratic Power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The more the revolutionary and constitutional groups sought to strengthen
+ their position, the more pronounced became the reactionary tendencies in
+ the official world, and these received in 1863 an immense impetus from the
+ Polish insurrection, with which the Nihilists and even some of the
+ Liberals sympathised.* That ill-advised attempt on the part of the Poles
+ to recover their independence had a curious effect on Russian public
+ opinion. Alexander II., with the warm approval of the more Liberal section
+ of the educated classes, was in the course of creating for Poland almost
+ complete administrative autonomy under the viceroyalty of a Russian Grand
+ Duke; and the Emperor's brother Constantine was preparing to carry out the
+ scheme in a generous spirit. Soon it became evident that what the Poles
+ wanted was not administrative autonomy, but political independence, with
+ the frontiers which existed before the first partition! Trusting to the
+ expected assistance of the Western Powers and the secret connivance of
+ Austria, they raised the standard of insurrection, and some trifling
+ successes were magnified by the pro-Polish Press into important victories.
+ As the news of the rising spread over Russia, there was a moment of
+ hesitation. Those who had been for some years habitually extolling liberty
+ and self-government as the normal conditions of progress, who had been
+ sympathising warmly with every Liberal movement, whether at home or
+ abroad, and who had put forward a voluntary federation of independent
+ Communes as the ideal State organism, could not well frown on the
+ political aspirations of the Polish patriots. The Liberal sentiment of
+ that time was so extremely philosophical and cosmopolitan that it hardly
+ distinguished between Poles and Russians, and liberty was supposed to be
+ the birthright of every man and woman to whatever nationality they might
+ happen to belong. But underneath these beautiful artificial clouds of
+ cosmopolitan Liberal sentiment lay the volcano of national patriotism,
+ dormant for the moment, but by no means extinct. Though the Russians are
+ in some respects the most cosmopolitan of European nations, they are at
+ the same time capable of indulging in violent outbursts of patriotic
+ fanaticism; and events in Warsaw brought into hostile contact these two
+ contradictory elements in the national character. The struggle was only
+ momentary. Ere long the patriotic feelings gained the upper hand and
+ crushed all cosmopolitan sympathy with political freedom. The Moscow
+ Gazette, the first of the papers to recover its mental equilibrium,
+ thundered against the pseudo-Liberal sentimentalism, which would, if
+ unchecked, necessarily lead to the dismemberment of the Empire, and its
+ editor, Katkoff, became for a time the most influential private individual
+ in the country. A few, indeed, remained true to their convictions. Herzen,
+ for instance, wrote in the Kolokol a glowing panegyric on two Russian
+ officers who had refused to fire on the insurgents; and here and there a
+ good Orthodox Russian might be found who confessed that he was ashamed of
+ Muravieff's extreme severity in Lithuania. But such men were few, and were
+ commonly regarded as traitors, especially after the ill-advised diplomatic
+ intervention of the Western Powers. Even Herzen, by his publicly expressed
+ sympathy with the insurgents, lost entirely his popularity and influence
+ among his fellow-countrymen. The great majority of the public thoroughly
+ approved of the severe energetic measures adopted by the Government, and
+ when the insurrection was suppressed, men who had a few months previously
+ spoken and written in magniloquent terms about humanitarian Liberalism
+ joined in the ovations offered to Muravieff! At a great dinner given in
+ his honour, that ruthless administrator of the old Muscovite type, who had
+ systematically opposed the emancipation of the serfs and had never
+ concealed his contempt for the Liberal ideas in fashion, could ironically
+ express his satisfaction at seeing around him so many "new friends"!**
+ This revulsion of public feeling gave the Moscow Slavophils an opportunity
+ of again preaching their doctrine that the safety and prosperity of Russia
+ were to be found, not in the Liberalism and Constitutionalism of Western
+ Europe, but in patriarchal autocracy, Eastern Orthodoxy, and other
+ peculiarities of Russian nationality. Thus the reactionary tendencies
+ gained ground; but Alexander II., while causing all political agitation to
+ be repressed, did not at once abandon his policy of introducing radical
+ reforms by means of the Autocratic Power. On the contrary, he gave orders
+ that the preparatory work for creating local self-government and
+ reorganising the Law Courts should be pushed on energetically. The
+ important laws for the establishment of the Zemstvo and for the great
+ judicial reforms, which I have described in previous chapters, both date
+ from the year 1864.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The students of the St. Petersburg University scandalised
+ their more patriotic fellow-countrymen by making a
+ pro-Polish demonstration.
+
+ ** In fairness to Count Muravieff I must say that he was not
+ quite so black as he was painted in the Polish and
+ West-European Press. He left an interesting autobiographical
+ fragment relating to the history of this time, but it is not
+ likely to be printed for some years. As an historical
+ document it is valuable, but must be used with caution by
+ the future historian. A copy of it was for some time in my
+ possession, but I was bound by a promise not to make
+ extracts.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ These and other reforms of a less important kind made no impression on the
+ young irreconcilables. A small group of them, under the leadership of a
+ certain Ishutin, formed in Moscow a small secret society, and conceived
+ the design of assassinating the Emperor, in the hope that his son and
+ successor, who was erroneously supposed to be imbued with ultra-Liberal
+ ideas, might continue the work which his father had begun and had not the
+ courage to complete. In April, 1866, the attempt on the life of the
+ Emperor was made by a youth called Karakozof as his Majesty was leaving a
+ public garden in St. Petersburg, but the bullet happily missed its mark,
+ and the culprit was executed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This incident formed a turning-point in the policy of the Government.
+ Alexander II. began to fear that he had gone too far, or, at least, too
+ quickly, in his policy of radical reform. An Imperial rescript announced
+ that law, property, and religion were in danger, and that the Government
+ would lean on the Noblesse and other conservative elements of Society. The
+ two periodicals which advocated the most advanced views (Sovremennik and
+ Russkoye Slovo) were suppressed permanently, and precautions were taken to
+ prevent the annual assemblies of the Zemstvo from giving public expression
+ to the aspirations of the moderate Liberals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A secret official inquiry showed that the revolutionary agitation
+ proceeded in all cases from young men who were studying, or had recently
+ studied, in the universities, the seminaries, or the technical schools,
+ such as the Medical Academy and the Agricultural Institute. Plainly,
+ therefore, the system of education was at fault. The semi-military system
+ of the time of Nicholas had been supplanted by one in which discipline was
+ reduced to a minimum and the study of natural science formed a prominent
+ element. Here it was thought, lay the chief root of the evil. Englishmen
+ may have some difficulty in imagining a possible connection between
+ natural science and revolutionary agitation. To them the two things must
+ seem wide as the poles asunder. Surely mathematics, chemistry, physiology,
+ and similar subjects have nothing to do with politics. When a young
+ Englishman takes to studying any branch of natural science he gets up his
+ subject by means of lectures, text-books, and museums or laboratories, and
+ when he has mastered it he probably puts his knowledge to some practical
+ use. In Russia it is otherwise. Few students confine themselves to their
+ speciality. The majority of them dislike the laborious work of mastering
+ dry details, and, with the presumption which is often found in conjunction
+ with youth and a smattering of knowledge, they aspire to become social
+ reformers and imagine themselves specially qualified for such activity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what, it may be asked, has social reform to do with natural science? I
+ have already indicated the connection in the Russian mind. Though very few
+ of the students of that time had ever read the voluminous works of Auguste
+ Comte, they were all more or less imbued with the spirit of the Positive
+ Philosophy, in which all the sciences are subsidiary to sociology, and
+ social reorganisation is the ultimate object of scientific research. The
+ imaginative Positivist can see with prophetic eye humanity reorganised on
+ strictly scientific principles. Cool-headed people who have had a little
+ experience of the world, if they ever indulge in such delightful dreams,
+ recognise clearly that this ultimate goal of human intellectual activity,
+ if it is ever to be reached, is still a long way off in the misty distance
+ of the future; but the would-be social reformers among the Russian
+ students of the sixties were too young, too inexperienced, and too
+ presumptuously self-confident to recognise this plain, simple truth. They
+ felt that too much valuable time had been already lost, and they were
+ madly impatient to begin the great work without further delay. As soon as
+ they had acquired a smattering of chemistry, physiology, and biology they
+ imagined themselves capable of reorganising human society from top to
+ bottom, and when they had acquired this conviction they were of course
+ unfitted for the patient, plodding study of details.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To remedy these evils, Count Dimitri Tolstoy, who was regarded as a pillar
+ of Conservatism, was appointed Minister of Public Instruction, with the
+ mission of protecting the young generation against pernicious ideas, and
+ eradicating from the schools, colleges, and universities all revolutionary
+ tendencies. He determined to introduce more discipline into all the
+ educational establishments and to supplant to a certain extent the
+ superficial study of natural science by the thorough study of the classics&mdash;that
+ is to say, Latin and Greek. This scheme, which became known before it was
+ actually put into execution, produced a storm of discontent in the young
+ generation. Discipline at that time was regarded as an antiquated and
+ useless remnant of patriarchal tyranny, and young men who were impatient
+ to take part in social reorganisation resented being treated as naughty
+ schoolboys. To them it seemed that the Latin grammar was an ingenious
+ instrument for stultifying youthful intelligence, destroying intellectual
+ development, and checking political progress. Ingenious speculations about
+ the possible organisation of the working classes and grandiose views of
+ the future of humanity are so much more interesting and agreeable than the
+ rules of Latin syntax and the Greek irregular verbs!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Count Tolstoy could congratulate himself on the efficacy of his
+ administration, for from the time of his appointment there was a lull in
+ the political excitement. During three or four years there was only one
+ political trial, and that an insignificant one; whereas there had been
+ twenty between 1861 and 1864, and all more or less important. I am not at
+ all sure, however, that the educational reform which created much
+ momentary irritation and discontent had anything to do with the
+ improvement in the situation. In any case, there were other and more
+ potent causes at work. The excitement was too intense to be long-lived,
+ and the fashionable theories too fanciful to stand the wear and tear of
+ everyday life. They evaporated, therefore, with amazing rapidity when the
+ leaders of the movement had disappeared&mdash;Tchernishevski and others by
+ exile, and Dobrolubof and Pissaref by death&mdash;and when among the less
+ prominent representatives of the younger generation many succumbed to the
+ sobering influences of time and experience or drifted into lucrative
+ professions. Besides this, the reactionary currents were making themselves
+ felt, especially since the attempt on the life of the Emperor. So long as
+ these had been confined to the official world they had not much affected
+ the literature, except externally through the Press-censure, but when they
+ permeated the reading public their influence was much stronger. Whatever
+ the cause, there is no doubt that, in the last years of the sixties, there
+ was a subsidence of excitement and enthusiasm and the peculiar
+ intellectual phenomenon which had been nicknamed Nihilism was supposed to
+ be a thing of the past. In reality the movement of which Nihilism was a
+ prominent manifestation had merely lost something of its academic
+ character and was entering on a new stage of development.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0035" id="link2HCH0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ SOCIALIST PROPAGANDA, REVOLUTIONARY AGITATION, AND TERRORISM
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Closer Relations with Western Socialism&mdash;Attempts to Influence the
+ Masses&mdash;Bakunin and Lavroff&mdash;"Going in among the People"&mdash;The
+ Missionaries of Revolutionary Socialism&mdash;Distinction between
+ Propaganda and Agitation&mdash;Revolutionary Pamphlets for the Common
+ People&mdash;Aims and Motives of the Propagandists&mdash;Failure of
+ Propaganda&mdash;Energetic Repression&mdash;Fruitless Attempts at
+ Agitation&mdash;Proposal to Combine with Liberals&mdash;Genesis of
+ Terrorism&mdash;My Personal Relations with the Revolutionists&mdash;Shadowers
+ and Shadowed&mdash;A Series of Terrorist Crimes&mdash;A Revolutionist
+ Congress&mdash;Unsuccessful Attempts to Assassinate the Tsar&mdash;Ineffectual
+ Attempt at Conciliation by Loris Melikof&mdash;Assassination of Alexander
+ II.&mdash;The Executive Committee Shows Itself Unpractical&mdash;Widespread
+ Indignation and Severe Repression&mdash;Temporary Collapse of the
+ Revolutionary Movement&mdash;A New Revolutionary Movement in Sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Count Tolstoy's educational reform had one effect which was not
+ anticipated: it brought the revolutionists into closer contact with
+ Western Socialism. Many students, finding their position in Russia
+ uncomfortable, determined to go abroad and continue their studies in
+ foreign universities, where they would be free from the inconveniences of
+ police supervision and Press-censure. Those of the female sex had an
+ additional motive to emigrate, because they could not complete their
+ studies in Russia, but they had more difficulty in carrying out their
+ intention, because parents naturally disliked the idea of their daughters
+ going abroad to lead a Bohemian life, and they very often obstinately
+ refused to give their consent. In such cases the persistent daughter found
+ herself in a dilemma. Though she might run away from her family and
+ possibly earn her own living, she could not cross the frontier without a
+ passport, and without the parental sanction a passport could not be
+ obtained. Of course she might marry and get the consent of her husband,
+ but most of the young ladies objected to the trammels of matrimony.
+ Occasionally the problem was solved by means of a fictitious marriage, and
+ when a young man could not be found to co-operate voluntarily in the
+ arrangement, the Terrorist methods, which the revolutionists adopted a few
+ years later for other purposes, might be employed. I have heard of at
+ least one case in which an ardent female devotee of medical science
+ threatened to shoot a student who was going abroad if he did not submit to
+ the matrimonial ceremony and allow her to accompany him to the frontier as
+ his official wife!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strange as this story may seem, it contains nothing inherently improbable.
+ At that time the energetic young ladies of the Nihilist school were not to
+ be diverted from their purpose by trifling obstacles. We shall meet some
+ of them hereafter, displaying great courage and tenacity in revolutionary
+ activity. One of them, for example, attempted to murder the Prefect of St.
+ Petersburg; and another, a young person of considerable refinement and
+ great personal charm, gave the signal for the assassination of Alexander
+ II. and expiated her crime on the scaffold without the least sign of
+ repentance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most of the studious emigres of both sexes went to Zurich, where female
+ students were admitted to the medical classes. Here they made the
+ acquaintance of noted Socialists from various countries who had settled in
+ Switzerland, and being in search of panaceas for social regeneration, they
+ naturally fell under their influence, at the same time they read with
+ avidity the works of Proudhon, Lassalle, Buchner, Marx, Flerovski,
+ Pfeiffer, and other writers of "advanced opinions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the apostles of socialism living at that time in Switzerland they
+ found a sympathetic fellow-countryman in the famous Anarchist, Bakunin,
+ who had succeeded in escaping from Siberia. His ideal was the immediate
+ overthrow of all existing Governments, the destruction of all
+ administrative organisation, the abolition of all bourgeois institutions,
+ and the establishment of an entirely new order of things on the basis of a
+ free federation of productive Communes, in which all the land should be
+ distributed among those capable of tilling it and the instruments of
+ production confided to co-operative associations. Efforts to obtain mere
+ political reforms, even of the most radical type, were regarded by him
+ with contempt as miserable palliatives, which could be of no real,
+ permanent benefit to the masses, and might be positively injurious by
+ prolonging the present era of bourgeois domination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the dissemination of these principles a special organ called The Cause
+ of the People (Narodnoye Dyelo) was founded in Geneva in 1868 and was
+ smuggled across the Russian frontier in considerable quantities. It aimed
+ at drawing away the young generation from Academic Nihilism to more
+ practical revolutionary activity, but it evidently remained to some extent
+ under the old influences, for it indulged occasionally in very abstract
+ philosophical disquisitions. In its first number, for example, it
+ published a programme in which the editors thought it necessary to declare
+ that they were materialists and atheists, because the belief in God and a
+ future life, as well as every other kind of idealism, demoralises the
+ people, inspiring it with mutually contradictory aspirations, and thereby
+ depriving it of the energy necessary for the conquest of its natural
+ rights in this world, and the complete organisation of a free and happy
+ life. At the end of two years this organ for moralising the people
+ collapsed from want of funds, but other periodicals and pamphlets were
+ printed, and the clandestine relations between the exiles in Switzerland
+ and their friends in St. Petersburg were maintained without difficulty,
+ notwithstanding the efforts of the police to cut the connection. In this
+ way Young Russia became more and more saturated with the extreme Socialist
+ theories current in Western Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thanks partly to this foreign influence and partly to their own practical
+ experience, the would-be reformers who remained at home came to understand
+ that academic talking and discussing could bring about no serious results.
+ Students alone, however numerous and however devoted to the cause, could
+ not hope to overthrow or coerce the Government. It was childish to suppose
+ that the walls of the autocratic Jericho would fall by the blasts of
+ academic trumpets. Attempts at revolution could not be successful without
+ the active support of the people, and consequently the revolutionary
+ agitation must be extended to the masses. So far there was complete
+ agreement among the revolutionists, but with regard to the modus operandi
+ emphatic differences of opinion appeared. Those who were carried away by
+ the stirring accents of Bakunin imagined that if the masses could only be
+ made to feel themselves the victims of administrative and economic
+ oppression, they would rise and free themselves by a united effort.
+ According to this view all that was required was that popular discontent
+ should be excited and that precautions should be taken to ensure that the
+ explosions of discontent should take place simultaneously all over the
+ country. The rest might safely be left, it was thought, to the operation
+ of natural forces and the inspiration of the moment. Against this
+ dangerous illusion warning voices were raised. Lavroff, for example, while
+ agreeing with Bakunin that mere political reforms were of little or no
+ value, and that any genuine improvement in the condition of the working
+ classes could proceed only from economic and social reorganisation,
+ maintained stoutly that the revolution, to be permanent and beneficial,
+ must be accomplished, not by demagogues directing the ignorant masses, but
+ by the people as a whole, after it had been enlightened and instructed as
+ to its true interests. The preparatory work would necessarily require a
+ whole generation of educated propagandists, living among the labouring
+ population rural and urban.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For some time there was a conflict between these two currents of opinion,
+ but the views of Lavroff, which were simply a practical development of
+ academic Nihilism, gained far more adherents than the violent anarchical
+ proposals of Bakunin, and finally the grandiose scheme of realising
+ gradually the Socialist ideal by indoctrinating the masses was adopted
+ with enthusiasm. In St. Petersburg, Moscow and other large towns the
+ student association for mutual instruction, to which I have referred in
+ the foregoing chapter, became centres of popular propaganda, and the
+ academic Nihilists were transformed into active missionaries. Scores of
+ male and female students, impatient to convert the masses to the gospel of
+ freedom and terrestrial felicity, sought to get into touch with the common
+ people by settling in the villages as school-teachers, medical
+ practitioners, midwives, etc., or by working as common factory hands in
+ the industrial centres. In order to obtain employment in the factories and
+ conceal their real purpose, they procured false passports, in which they
+ were described as belonging to the lower classes; and even those who
+ settled in the villages lived generally under assumed names. Thus was
+ formed a class of professional revolutionists, sometimes called the
+ Illegals, who were liable to be arrested at any moment by the police. As
+ compensation for the privations and hardships which they had to endure,
+ they had the consolation of believing that they were advancing the good
+ cause. The means they usually employed were formal conversations and
+ pamphlets expressly written for the purpose. The more enthusiastic and
+ persevering of these missionaries would continue their efforts for months
+ and years, remaining in communication with the headquarters in the capital
+ or some provincial town in order to report progress, obtain a fresh supply
+ of pamphlets, and get their forged passports renewed. This extraordinary
+ movement was called "going in among the people," and it spread among the
+ young generation like an epidemic. In 1873 it was suddenly reinforced by a
+ detachment of fresh recruits. Over a hundred Russian students were
+ recalled by the Government from Switzerland, in order to save them from
+ the baneful influence of Bakunin, Lavroff, and other noted Socialists, and
+ a large proportion of them joined the ranks of the propagandists.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Instances of going in among the people had happened as
+ early as 1864, but they did not become frequent till after
+ 1870.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the aims and methods of the propagandists, a good deal of
+ information was obtained in the course of a judicial inquiry instituted in
+ 1875. A peasant, who was at the same time a factory worker, informed the
+ police that certain persons were distributing revolutionary pamphlets
+ among the factory-hands, and as a proof of what he said he produced some
+ pamphlets which he had himself received. This led to an investigation,
+ which showed that a number of young men and women, evidently belonging to
+ the educated classes, were disseminating revolutionary ideas by means of
+ pamphlets and conversation. Arrests followed, and it was soon discovered
+ that these agitators belonged to a large secret association, which had its
+ centre in Moscow and local branches in Ivanovo, Tula, and Kief. In
+ Ivanovo, for instance&mdash;a manufacturing town about a hundred miles to
+ the northeast of Moscow&mdash;the police found a small apartment inhabited
+ by three young men and four young women, all of whom, though belonging by
+ birth to the educated classes, had the appearance of ordinary factory
+ workers, prepared their own food, did with their own hands all the
+ domestic work, and sought to avoid everything which could distinguish them
+ from the labouring population. In the apartment were found 240 copies of
+ revolutionary pamphlets, a considerable sum of money, a large amount of
+ correspondence in cypher, and several forged passports.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How many persons the society contained, it is impossible to say, because a
+ large portion of them eluded the vigilance of the police; but many were
+ arrested, and ultimately forty-seven were condemned. Of these, eleven were
+ noble, seven were sons of parish priests, and the remainder belong to the
+ lower classes&mdash;that is to say, the small officials, burghers, and
+ peasants. The average age of the prisoners was twenty-four, the oldest
+ being thirty-six and the youngest under seventeen! Only five or six were
+ over twenty-five, and none of these were ringleaders. The female element
+ was represented by no less than fifteen young persons, whose ages were on
+ an average under twenty-two. Two of these, to judge by their photographs,
+ were of refined, prepossessing appearance, and seemingly little fitted for
+ taking part in wholesale massacres such as the society talked of
+ organising.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The character and aims of the society were clearly depicted in the
+ documentary and oral evidence produced at the trial. According to the
+ fundamental principles, there should exist among the members absolute
+ equality, complete mutual responsibility and full frankness and confidence
+ with regard to the affairs of the association. Among the conditions of
+ admission we find that the candidate should devote himself entirely to
+ revolutionary activity; that he should be ready to sever all ties, whether
+ of friendship or of love, for the good cause; that he should possess great
+ powers of self-sacrifice and the capacity for keeping secrets; and that he
+ should consent to become, when necessary, a common labourer in a factory.
+ The desire to maintain absolute equality is well illustrated by the
+ article of the statutes regarding the administration: the office-bearers
+ are not to be chosen by election, but all members are to be office-bearers
+ in turn, and the term of office must not exceed one month!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The avowed aim of the society was to destroy the existing social order,
+ and to replace it by one in which there should be no private property and
+ no distinctions of class or wealth; or, as it is expressed in one
+ document, "to found on the ruins of the present social organisation the
+ Empire of the working classes." The means to be employed were indicated in
+ a general way, but each member was to adapt himself to circumstances and
+ was to devote all his energy to forwarding the cause of the revolution.
+ For the guidance of the inexperienced, the following means were
+ recommended: simple conversations, dissemination of pamphlets, the
+ exciting of discontent, the formation of organised groups, the creation of
+ funds and libraries. These, taken together, constitute, in the terminology
+ of revolutionary science, "propaganda," and in addition to it there should
+ be "agitation." The technical distinction between these two processes is
+ that propaganda has a purely preparatory character, and aims merely at
+ enlightening the masses regarding the true nature of the revolutionary
+ cause, whereas agitation aims at exciting an individual or a group to acts
+ which are considered, in the existing regime, as illegal. In time of peace
+ "pure agitation" was to be carried on by means of organised bands which
+ should frighten the Government and the privileged classes, draw away the
+ attention of the authorities from less overt kinds of revolutionary
+ action, raise the spirit of the people and thereby render it more
+ accessible to revolutionary ideas, obtain pecuniary means for further
+ activity, and liberate political prisoners. In time of insurrection the
+ members should give to all movements every assistance in their power, and
+ impress on them a Socialistic character. The central administration and
+ the local branches should establish relations with publishers, and take
+ steps to secure a regular supply of prohibited books from abroad. Such are
+ a few characteristic extracts from a document which might fairly be called
+ a treatise on revolutionology.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a specimen of the revolutionary pamphlets circulated by the
+ propagandists and agitators I may give here a brief account of one which
+ is well known to the political police. It is entitled Khitraya Mekhanika
+ (Cunning Machinery), and gives a graphic picture of the ideas and methods
+ employed. The mise en scene is extremely simple. Two peasants, Stepan and
+ Andrei, are represented as meeting in a gin-shop and drinking together.
+ Stepan is described as good and kindly when he has to do with men of his
+ own class, but very sharp-tongued when speaking with a foreman or manager.
+ Always ready with an answer, he can on occasions silence even an official!
+ He has travelled all over the Empire, has associated with all sorts and
+ conditions of men, sees everything most clearly, and is, in short, a very
+ remarkable man. One of his excellent qualities is that, being
+ "enlightened" himself, he is always ready to enlighten others, and he now
+ finds an opportunity of displaying his powers. When Andrei, who is still
+ unenlightened, proposes that they should drink another glass of vodka, he
+ replies that the Tsar, together with the nobles and traders, bars the way
+ to the throat. As his companion does not understand this metaphorical
+ language, he explains that if there were no Tsars, nobles, or traders, he
+ could get five glasses of vodka for the sum that he now pays for one
+ glass. This naturally suggests wider topics, and Stepan gives something
+ like a lecture. The common people, he explains, pay by far the greater
+ part of the taxation, and at the same time do all the work; they plough
+ the fields, build the houses and churches, work in the mills and
+ factories, and in return they are systematically robbed and beaten. And
+ what is done with all the money that is taken from them? First of all, the
+ Tsar gets nine millions of roubles&mdash;enough to feed half a province&mdash;and
+ with that sum he amuses himself, has hunting-parties, and feasts, eats,
+ drinks, makes merry, and lives in stone houses. He gave liberty, it is
+ true, to the peasants; but we know what the Emancipation really was. The
+ best land was taken away and the taxes were increased, lest the muzhik
+ should get fat and lazy. The Tsar is himself the richest landed proprietor
+ and manufacturer in the country. He not only robs us as much as he
+ pleases, but he has sold into slavery (by forming a national debt) our
+ children and grandchildren. He takes our sons as soldiers, shuts them up
+ in barracks so that they should not see their brother-peasants, and
+ hardens their hearts so that they become wild beasts, ready to rend their
+ parents. The nobles and traders likewise rob the poor peasants. In short,
+ all the upper classes have invented a bit of cunning machinery by which
+ the muzhik is made to pay for their pleasures and luxuries. The people
+ will one day rise and break this machinery to pieces. When that day comes
+ they must break every part of it, for if one bit escapes destruction all
+ the other parts of it will immediately grow up again. All the force is on
+ the side of the peasants, if they only knew how to use it. Knowledge will
+ come in time. They will then destroy this machine, and perceive that the
+ only real remedy for all social evils is brotherhood. People should live
+ like brothers, having no mine and thine, but all things in common. When we
+ have created brotherhood, there will be no riches and no thieves, but
+ right and righteousness without end. In conclusion, Stepan addresses a
+ word to "the torturers": "When the people rise, the Tsar will send troops
+ against us, and the nobles and capitalists will stake their last rouble on
+ the result. If they do not succeed, they must not expect any quarter from
+ us. They may conquer us once or twice, but we shall at last get our own,
+ for there is no power that can withstand the whole people. Then we shall
+ cleanse the country of our persecutors, and establish a brotherhood in
+ which there will be no mine and thine, but all will work for the common
+ weal. We shall construct no cunning machinery, but shall pluck up evil by
+ the roots, and establish eternal justice!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The above-mentioned distinction between Propaganda and Agitation, which
+ plays a considerable part in revolutionary literature, had at that time
+ more theoretical than practical importance. The great majority of those
+ who took an active part in the movement confined their efforts to
+ indoctrinating the masses with Socialistic and subversive ideas, and
+ sometimes their methods were rather childish. As an illustration I may
+ cite an amusing incident related by one of the boldest and most tenacious
+ of the revolutionists, who subsequently acquired a certain sense of
+ humour. He and a friend were walking one day on a country road, when they
+ were overtaken by a peasant in his cart. Ever anxious to sow the good
+ seed, they at once entered into conversation with the rustic, telling him
+ that he ought not to pay his taxes, because the tchinovniks robbed the
+ people, and trying to convince him by quotations from Scripture that he
+ ought to resist the authorities. The prudent muzhik whipped up his horse
+ and tried to get out of hearing, but the two zealots ran after him and
+ continued the sermon till they were completely out of breath. Other
+ propagandists were more practical, and preached a species of agrarian
+ socialism which the rural population could understand. At the time of the
+ Emancipation the peasants were convinced as I have mentioned in a previous
+ chapter, that the Tsar meant to give them all the land, and to compensate
+ the landed proprietors by salaries. Even when the law was read and
+ explained to them, they clung obstinately to their old convictions, and
+ confidently expected that the REAL Emancipation would be proclaimed
+ shortly. Taking advantage of this state of things, the propagandists to
+ whom I refer confirmed the peasants in their error, and sought in this way
+ to sow discontent against the proprietors and the Government. Their
+ watchword was "Land and Liberty," and they formed for a good many years a
+ distinct group, under that title (Zemlya i Volya, or more briefly
+ Zemlevoltsi).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the St. Petersburg group, which aspired to direct and control this
+ movement, there were one or two men who held different views as to the
+ real object of propaganda and agitation. One of these, Prince Krapotkin,
+ has told the world what his object was at that time. He hoped that the
+ Government would be frightened and that the Autocratic Power, as in France
+ on the eve of the Revolution, would seek support in the landed
+ proprietors, and call together a National Assembly. Thus a constitution
+ would be granted, and though the first Assembly might be conservative in
+ spirit, autocracy would be compelled in the long run to yield to
+ parliamentary pressure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No such elaborate projects were entertained, I believe, by the majority of
+ the propagandists. Their reasoning was much simpler: "The Government,
+ having become reactionary, tries to prevent us from enlightening the
+ people; we will do it in spite of the Government!" The dangers to which
+ they exposed themselves only confirmed them in their resolution. Though
+ they honestly believed themselves to be Realists and Materialists, they
+ were at heart romantic Idealists, panting to do something heroic. They had
+ been taught by the apostles whom they venerated, from Belinski downwards,
+ that the man who simply talks about the good of the people, and does
+ nothing to promote it, is among the most contemptible of human beings. No
+ such reproach must be addressed to them. If the Government opposed and
+ threatened, that was no excuse for inactivity. They must be up and doing.
+ "Forward! forward! Let us plunge into the people, identify ourselves with
+ them, and work for their benefit! Suffering is in store for us, but we
+ must endure it with fortitude!" The type which Tchernishevski had depicted
+ in his famous novel, under the name of Rakhmetof&mdash;the youth who led
+ an ascetic life and subjected himself to privation and suffering as a
+ preparation for future revolutionary activity&mdash;now appeared in the
+ flesh. If we may credit Bakunin, these Rakhmetofs had not even the
+ consolation of believing in the possibility of a revolution, but as they
+ could not and would not remain passive spectators of the misfortunes of
+ the people, they resolved to go in among the masses in order to share with
+ them fraternally their sufferings, and at the same time to teach and
+ prepare, not theoretically, but practically by their living example.* This
+ is, I believe, an exaggeration. The propagandists were, for the most part
+ of incredibly sanguine temperament.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Bakunin: "Gosudarstvennost' i Anarkhiya" ("State
+ Organisation and Anarchy"), Zurich, 1873.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The success of the propaganda and agitation was not at all in proportion
+ to the numbers and enthusiasm of those who took part in it. Most of these
+ displayed more zeal than mother-wit and discretion. Their Socialism was
+ too abstract and scientific to be understood by rustics, and when they
+ succeeded in making themselves intelligible they awakened in their hearers
+ more suspicion than sympathy. The muzhik is a very matter-of-fact
+ practical person, totally incapable of understanding what Americans call
+ "hifalutin" tendencies in speech and conduct, and as he listened to the
+ preaching of the new Gospel doubts and questionings spontaneously rose in
+ his mind: "What do those young people, who betray their gentlefolk origin
+ by their delicate white hands, their foreign phrases, their ignorance of
+ the common things of everyday peasant life, really want? Why are they
+ bearing hardships and taking so much trouble? They tell us it is for our
+ good, but we are not such fools and simpletons as they take us for. They
+ are not doing it all for nothing. What do they expect from us in return?
+ Whatever it is, they are evidently evil-doers, and perhaps moshenniki
+ (swindlers). Devil take them!" and thereupon the cautious muzhik turns his
+ back upon his disinterested self-sacrificing teachers, or goes quietly and
+ denounces them to the police! It is not only in Spain that we encounter
+ Don Quixotes and Sancho Panzas!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Occasionally a worse fate befell the missionaries. If they allowed
+ themselves, as they sometimes did, to "blaspheme" against religion or the
+ Tsar, they ran the risk of being maltreated on the spot. I have heard of
+ one case in which the punishment for blasphemy was applied by sturdy
+ peasant matrons. Even when they escaped such mishaps they had not much
+ reason to congratulate themselves on their success. After three years of
+ arduous labour the hundreds of apostles could not boast of more than a
+ score or two of converts among the genuine working classes, and even these
+ few did not all remain faithful unto death. Some of them, however, it must
+ be admitted, laboured and suffered to the end with the courage and
+ endurance of true martyrs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not merely the indifference or hostility of the masses that the
+ propagandists had to complain of. The police soon got on their track, and
+ did not confine themselves to persuasion and logical arguments. Towards
+ the end of 1873 they arrested some members of the central directory group
+ in St. Petersburg, and in the following May they discovered in the
+ province of Saratof an affiliated organisation with which nearly 800
+ persons were connected, about one-fifth of them belonging to the female
+ sex. A few came of well-to-do families&mdash;sons and daughters of minor
+ officials or small landed proprietors&mdash;but the great majority were
+ poor students of humbler origin, a large contingent being supplied by the
+ sons of the poor parish clergy. In other provinces the authorities made
+ similar discoveries. Before the end of the year a large proportion of the
+ propagandists were in prison, and the centralised organisation, so far as
+ such a thing existed, was destroyed. Gradually it dawned on the minds even
+ of the Don Quixotes that pacific propaganda was no longer possible, and
+ that attempts to continue it could lead only to useless sacrifices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a time there was universal discouragement in the revolutionary ranks;
+ and among those who had escaped arrest there were mutual recriminations
+ and endless discussions about the causes of failure and the changes to be
+ made in modes of action. The practical results of these recriminations and
+ discussions was that the partisans of a slow, pacific propaganda retired
+ to the background, and the more impatient revolutionary agitators took
+ possession of the movement. These maintained stoutly that as pacific
+ propaganda had become impossible, stronger methods must be adopted. The
+ masses must be organised so as to offer successful resistance to the
+ Government. Conspiracies must therefore be formed, local disorders
+ provoked, and blood made to flow. The part of the country which seemed
+ best adapted for experiments of this kind was the southern and
+ southeastern region, inhabited by the descendants of the turbulent Cossack
+ population which had raised formidable insurrections under Stenka Razin
+ and Pugatcheff in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Here, then,
+ the more impatient agitators began their work. A Kief group called the
+ Buntari (rioters), composed of about twenty-five individuals, settled in
+ various localities as small shopkeepers or horse dealers, or went about as
+ workmen or peddlers. One member of the group has given us in his
+ reminiscences an amusing account of the experiment. Everywhere the
+ agitators found the peasants suspicious and inhospitable, and consequently
+ they had to suffer a great deal of discomfort. Some of them at once gave
+ up the task as hopeless. The others settled in a village and began
+ operations. Having made a topographic survey of the locality, they worked
+ out an ingenious plan of campaign; but they had no recruits for the future
+ army of insurrection, and if they had been able to get recruits, they had
+ no arms for them, and no money wherewith to purchase arms or anything
+ else. In these circumstances they gravely appointed a committee to collect
+ funds, knowing very well that no money would be forthcoming. It was as if
+ a shipwrecked crew in an open boat, having reached the brink of
+ starvation, appointed a committee to obtain a supply of fresh water and
+ provisions! In the hope of obtaining assistance from headquarters, a
+ delegate was sent to St. Petersburg and Moscow to explain that for the
+ arming of the population about a quarter of a million of roubles was
+ required. The delegate brought back thirty second-hand revolvers! The
+ revolutionist who confesses all this* recognises that the whole scheme was
+ childishly unpractical: "We chose the path of popular insurrection because
+ we had faith in the revolutionary spirit of the masses, in its power and
+ its invincibility. That was the weak side of our position; and the most
+ curious part of it was that we drew proofs in support of our theory from
+ history&mdash;from the abortive insurrections of Pazin and Pugatcheff,
+ which took place in an age when the Government had only a small regular
+ army and no railways or telegraphs! We did not even think of attempting a
+ propaganda among the military!" In the district of Tchigirin the agitators
+ had a little momentary success, but the result was the same. There a
+ student called Stefanovitch pretended that the Tsar was struggling with
+ the officials to benefit the peasantry, and he showed the simple rustics a
+ forged imperial manifesto in which they were ordered to form a society for
+ the purpose of raising an insurrection against the officials, the nobles,
+ and the priests. At one moment (April, 1877), the society had about 600
+ members, but a few months later it was discovered by the police, and the
+ leaders and peasants were arrested.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Debogorio-Mokrievitch. "Vospominaniya" ("Reminiscences").
+ Paris, 1894-99.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When it had thus become evident that propaganda and agitation were alike
+ useless, and when numerous arrests were being made daily, it became
+ necessary for the revolutionists to reconsider their position, and some of
+ the more moderate proposed to rally to the Liberals, as a temporary
+ measure. Hitherto there had been very little sympathy and a good deal of
+ openly avowed hostility between Liberals and revolutionists. The latter,
+ convinced that they could overthrow the Autocratic Power by their own
+ unaided efforts, had looked askance at Liberalism because they believed
+ that parliamentary discussions and party struggles would impede rather
+ than facilitate the advent of the Socialist Millennium, and strengthen the
+ domination of the bourgeoisie without really improving the condition of
+ the masses. Now, however, when the need of allies was felt, it seemed that
+ constitutional government might be used as a stepping-stone for reaching
+ the Socialist ideal, because it must grant a certain liberty of the Press
+ and of association, and it would necessarily abolish the existing
+ autocratic system of arresting, imprisoning and exiling, on mere
+ suspicion, without any regular form of legal procedure. As usual, an
+ appeal was made to history, and arguments were easily found in favour of
+ this course of action. The past of other nations had shown that in the
+ march of progress there are no sudden leaps and bounds, and it was
+ therefore absurd to imagine, as the revolutionists had hitherto done, that
+ Russian Autocracy could be swallowed by Socialism at a gulp. There must
+ always be periods of transition, and it seemed that such a transition
+ period might now be initiated. Liberalism might be allowed to destroy, or
+ at least weaken, Autocracy, and then it might be destroyed in its turn by
+ Socialism of the most advanced type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having adopted this theory of gradual historic development, some of the
+ more practical revolutionists approached the more advanced Liberals and
+ urged them to more energetic action; but before anything could be arranged
+ the more impatient revolutionists&mdash;notably the group called the
+ Narodovoltsi (National-will-ists)&mdash;intervened, denounced what they
+ considered an unholy alliance, and proposed a policy of terrorism by which
+ the Government would be frightened into a more conciliatory attitude.
+ Their idea was that the officials who displayed most zeal against the
+ revolutionary movement should be assassinated, and that every act of
+ severity on the part of the Administration should be answered by an act of
+ "revolutionary justice."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As it was evident that the choice between these two courses of action must
+ determine in great measure the future character and ultimate fate of the
+ movement, there was much discussion between the two groups; but the
+ question did not long remain in suspense. Soon the extreme party gained
+ the upper hand, and the Terrorist policy was adopted. I shall let the
+ revolutionists themselves explain this momentous decision. In a long
+ proclamation published some years later it is explained thus:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The revolutionary movement in Russia began with the so-called 'going in
+ among the people.' The first Russian revolutionists thought that the
+ freedom of the people could be obtained only by the people itself, and
+ they imagined that the only thing necessary was that the people should
+ absorb Socialistic ideas. To this it was supposed that the peasantry were
+ naturally inclined, because they already possess, in the rural Commune,
+ institutions which contain the seeds of Socialism, and which might serve
+ as a basis for the reconstruction of society according to Socialist
+ principles. The propagandists hoped, therefore, that in the teachings of
+ West European Socialism the people would recognise its own instinctive
+ creations in riper and more clearly defined forms and that it would
+ joyfully accept the new teaching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But the people did not understand its friends, and showed itself hostile
+ to them. It turned out that institutions born in slavery could not serve
+ as a foundation for the new construction, and that the man who was
+ yesterday a serf, though capable of taking part in disturbances, is not
+ fitted for conscious revolutionary work. With pain in their heart the
+ revolutionists had to confess that they were deceived in their hopes of
+ the people. Around them were no social revolutionary forces on which they
+ could lean for support, and yet they could not reconcile themselves with
+ the existing state of violence and slavery. Thereupon awakened a last hope&mdash;the
+ hope of a drowning man who clutches at a straw: a little group of heroic
+ and self-sacrificing individuals might accomplish with their own strength
+ the difficult task of freeing Russia from the yoke of autocracy. They had
+ to do it themselves, because there was no other means. But would they be
+ able to accomplish it? For them that question did not exist. The struggle
+ of that little group against autocracy was like the heroic means on which
+ a doctor decides when there is no longer any hope of the patient's
+ recovery. Terrorism was the only means that remained, and it had the
+ advantage of giving a natural vent to pent-up feelings, and of seeming a
+ reaction against the cruel persecutions of the Government. The party
+ called the Narodnaya Volya (National Will) was accordingly formed, and
+ during several years the world witnessed a spectacle that had never been
+ seen before in history. The Narodnaya Volya, insignificant in numbers but
+ strong in spirit, engaged in single combat with the powerful Russian
+ Government. Neither executions, nor imprisonment with hard labour, nor
+ ordinary imprisonment and exile, destroyed the energy of the
+ revolutionists. Under their shots fell, one after the other, the most
+ zealous and typical representatives of arbitrary action and violence. . .
+ ."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at this time, in 1877, when propaganda and agitation among the
+ masses were being abandoned for the system of terrorism, but before any
+ assassinations had taken place, that I accidentally came into personal
+ relations with some prominent adherents of the revolutionary movement. One
+ day a young man of sympathetic appearance, whom I did not know and who
+ brought no credentials, called on me in St. Petersburg and suggested to me
+ that I might make public through the English Press what he described as a
+ revolting act of tyranny and cruelty committed by General Trepof, the
+ Prefect of the city. That official, he said, in visiting recently one of
+ the prisons, had noticed that a young political prisoner called Bogolubof
+ did not salute him as he passed, and he had ordered him to be flogged in
+ consequence. To this I replied that I had no reason to disbelieve the
+ story, but that I had equally no reason to accept it as accurate, as it
+ rested solely on the evidence of a person with whom I was totally
+ unacquainted. My informant took the objection in good part, and offered me
+ the names and addresses of a number of persons who could supply me with
+ any proofs that I might desire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At his next visit I told him I had seen several of the persons he had
+ named, and that I could not help perceiving that they were closely
+ connected with the revolutionary movement. I then went on to suggest that
+ as the sympathisers with that movement constantly complained that they
+ were systematically misrepresented, calumniated and caricatured, the
+ leaders ought to give the world an accurate account of their real
+ doctrines, and in this respect I should be glad to assist them. Already I
+ knew something of the subject, because I had many friends and
+ acquaintances among the sympathisers, and had often had with them
+ interminable discussions. With their ideas, so far as I knew them, I felt
+ bound to confess that I had no manner of sympathy, but I flattered myself,
+ and he himself had admitted, that I was capable of describing accurately
+ and criticising impartially doctrines with which I did not agree. My new
+ acquaintance, whom I may call Dimitry Ivan'itch, was pleased with the
+ proposal, and after he had consulted with some of his friends, we came to
+ an agreement by which I should receive all the materials necessary for
+ writing an accurate account of the doctrinal side of the movement. With
+ regard to any conspiracies that might be in progress, I warned him that he
+ must be strictly reticent, because if I came accidentally to know of any
+ terrorist designs, I should consider it my duty to warn the authorities.
+ For this reason I declined to attend any secret conclaves, and it was
+ agreed that I should be instructed without being initiated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first step in my instruction was not very satisfactory or encouraging.
+ One day Dimitri Ivan'itch brought me a large manuscript, which contained,
+ he said, the real doctrines of the revolutionists and the explanation of
+ their methods. I was surprised to find that it was written in English, and
+ I perceived at a glance that it was not at all what I wanted. As soon as I
+ had read the first sentence I turned to my friend and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am very sorry to find, Dimitri Ivan'itch, that you have not kept your
+ part of the bargain. We agreed, you may remember, that we were to act
+ towards each other in absolutely good faith, and here I find a flagrant
+ bit of bad faith in the very first sentence of the manuscript which you
+ have brought me. The document opens with the statement that a large number
+ of students have been arrested and imprisoned for distributing books among
+ the people. That statement may be true according to the letter, but it is
+ evidently intended to mislead. These youths have been arrested, as you
+ must know, not for distributing ordinary books, as the memorandum
+ suggests, but for distributing books of a certain kind. I have read some
+ of them, and I cannot feel at all surprised that the Government should
+ object to their being put into the hands of the ignorant masses. Take, for
+ example, the one entitled Khitraya Mekhanika, and others of the same type.
+ The practical teaching they contain is that the peasants should be ready
+ to rise and cut the throats of the landed proprietors and officials. Now,
+ a wholesale massacre of the kind may or may not be desirable in the
+ interests of Society, and justifiable according to some new code of higher
+ morality. That is a question into which I do not enter. All I maintain is
+ that the writer of this memorandum, in speaking of 'books,' meant to
+ mislead me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dimitri Ivan'itch looked puzzled and ashamed. "Forgive me," he said; "I am
+ to blame&mdash;not for having attempted to deceive you, but for not having
+ taken precautions. I have not read the manuscript, and I could not if I
+ wished, for it is written in English, and I know no language but my mother
+ tongue. My friends ought not to have done this. Give me back the paper,
+ and I shall take care that nothing of the sort occurs in future."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This promise was faithfully kept, and I had no further reason to complain.
+ Dimitri Ivan'itch gave me a considerable amount of information, and lent
+ me a valuable collection of revolutionary pamphlets. Unfortunately the
+ course of tuition was suddenly interrupted by unforeseen circumstances,
+ which I may mention as characteristic of life in St. Petersburg at the
+ time. My servant, an excellent young Russian, more honest than
+ intelligent, came to me one morning with a mysterious air, and warned me
+ to be on my guard, because there were "bad people" going about. On being
+ pressed a little, he explained to me what he meant. Two strangers had come
+ to him and, after offering him a few roubles, had asked him a number of
+ questions about my habits&mdash;at what hour I went out and came home,
+ what persons called on me, and much more of the same sort. "They even
+ tried, sir, to get into your sitting-room; but of course I did not allow
+ them. I believe they want to rob you!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not difficult to guess who these "bad people" were who took such a
+ keen interest in my doings, and who wanted to examine my apartment in my
+ absence. Any doubts I had on the subject were soon removed. On the morrow
+ and following days I noticed that whenever I went out, and wherever I
+ might walk or drive, I was closely followed by two unsympathetic-looking
+ individuals&mdash;so closely that when I turned round sharp they ran into
+ me. The first and second times this little accident occurred they received
+ a strong volley of unceremonious vernacular; but when we became better
+ acquainted we simply smiled at each other knowingly, as the old Roman
+ Augurs are supposed to have done when they met in public unobserved. There
+ was no longer any attempt at concealment or mystification. I knew I was
+ being shadowed, and the shadowers could not help perceiving that I knew
+ it. Yet, strange to say, they were never changed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader probably assumes that the secret police had somehow got wind of
+ my relations with the revolutionists. Such an assumption presupposes on
+ the part of the police an amount of intelligence and perspicacity which
+ they do not usually possess. On this occasion they were on an entirely
+ wrong scent, and the very day when I first noticed my shadowers, a high
+ official, who seemed to regard the whole thing as a good joke, told me
+ confidentially what the wrong scent was. At the instigation of an
+ ex-ambassador, from whom I had the misfortune to differ in matters of
+ foreign policy, the Moscow Gazette had denounced me publicly by name as a
+ person who was in the habit of visiting daily the Ministry of Foreign
+ Affairs&mdash;doubtless with the nefarious purpose of obtaining by illegal
+ means secret political information&mdash;and the police had concluded that
+ I was a fit and proper person to be closely watched. In reality, my
+ relations with the Russian Foreign Office, though inconvenient to the
+ ex-ambassador, were perfectly regular and above-board&mdash;sanctioned, in
+ fact, by Prince Gortchakoff&mdash;but the indelicate attentions of the
+ secret police were none the less extremely unwelcome, because some
+ intelligent police-agent might get onto the real scent, and cause me
+ serious inconvenience. I determined, therefore, to break off all relations
+ with Dimitri Ivan'itch and his friends, and postpone my studies to a more
+ convenient season; but that decision did not entirely extricate me from my
+ difficulties. The collection of revolutionary pamphlets was still in my
+ possession, and I had promised to return it. For some little time I did
+ not see how I could keep my promise without compromising myself or others,
+ but at last&mdash;after having had my shadowers carefully shadowed in
+ order to learn accurately their habits, and having taken certain elaborate
+ precautions, with which I need not trouble the reader, as he is not likely
+ ever to require them&mdash;I paid a visit secretly to Dimitri Ivan'itch in
+ his small room, almost destitute of furniture, handed him the big parcel
+ of pamphlets, warned him not to visit me again, and bade him farewell.
+ Thereupon we went our separate ways and I saw him no more. Whether he
+ subsequently played a leading part in the movement I never could
+ ascertain, because I did not know his real name; but if the conception
+ which I formed of his character was at all accurate, he probably ended his
+ career in Siberia, for he was not a man to look back after having put his
+ hand to the plough. That is a peculiar trait of the Russian revolutionists
+ of the period in question. Their passion for realising an impossible ideal
+ was incurable. Many of them were again and again arrested; and as soon as
+ they escaped or were liberated they almost invariably went back to their
+ revolutionary activity and worked energetically until they again fell into
+ the clutches of the police.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this digression into the sphere of personal reminiscences I return
+ now and take up again the thread of the narrative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have seen how the propaganda and the agitation had failed, partly
+ because the masses showed themselves indifferent or hostile, and partly
+ because the Government adopted vigorous repressive measures. We have seen,
+ too, how the leaders found themselves in face of a formidable dilemma;
+ either they must abandon their schemes or they must attack their
+ persecutors. The more energetic among them, as I have already stated,
+ chose the latter alternative, and they proceeded at once to carry out
+ their policy. In the course of a single year (February, 1878, to February,
+ 1879) a whole series of terrorist crimes was committed; in Kief an attempt
+ was made on the life of the Public Prosecutor, and an officer of
+ gendarmerie was stabbed; in St. Petersburg the Chief of the Political
+ Police of the Empire (General Mezentsef) was assassinated in broad
+ daylight in one of the central streets, and a similar attempt was made on
+ his successor (General Drenteln); at Kharkof the Governor (Prince
+ Krapotkin) was shot dead when entering his residence. During the same
+ period two members of the revolutionary organisation, accused of
+ treachery, were "executed" by order of local Committees. In most cases the
+ perpetrators of the crimes contrived to escape. One of them became well
+ known in Western Europe as an author under the pseudonym of Stepniak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Terrorism had not the desired effect. On the contrary, it stimulated the
+ zeal and activity of the authorities, and in the course of the winter of
+ 1878-79 hundreds of arrests&mdash;some say as many as 2,000&mdash;were
+ made in St. Petersburg alone. Driven to desperation, the revolutionists
+ still at large decided that it was useless to assassinate mere officials;
+ the fons et origo mali must be reached; a blow must be struck at the Tsar
+ himself! The first attempt was made by a young man called Solovyoff, who
+ fired several shots at Alexander II. as he was walking near the Winter
+ Palace, but none of them took effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This policy of aggressive terrorism did not meet with universal approval
+ among the revolutionists, and it was determined to discuss the matter at a
+ Congress of delegates from various local circles. The meetings were held
+ in June, 1879, two months after Solovyoff's unsuccessful attempt, at two
+ provincial towns, Lipetsk and Voronezh. It was there agreed in principle
+ to confirm the decision of the Terrorist Narodovoltsi. As the Liberals
+ were not in a position to create liberal institutions or to give
+ guarantees for political rights, which are the essential conditions of any
+ Socialist agitation, there remained for the revolutionary party no other
+ course than to destroy the despotic autocracy. Thereupon a programme of
+ action was prepared, and an Executive Committee elected. From that moment,
+ though there were still many who preferred milder methods, the Terrorists
+ had the upper hand, and they at once proceeded to centralise the
+ organisation and to introduce stricter discipline, with greater
+ precautions to ensure secrecy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Executive Committee imagined that by assassinating the Tsar autocracy
+ might be destroyed, and several carefully planned attempts were made. The
+ first plan was to wreck the train when the Imperial family were returning
+ to St. Petersburg from the Crimea. Mines were accordingly laid at three
+ separate points, but they all failed. At the last of the three points
+ (near Moscow) a train was blown up, but it was not the one in which the
+ Imperial family was travelling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not at all discouraged by this failure, nor by the discovery of its secret
+ printing-press by the police, the Executive Committee next tried to attain
+ its object by an explosion of dynamite in the Winter Palace when the
+ Imperial family were assembled at dinner. The execution was entrusted to a
+ certain Halturin, one of the few revolutionists of peasant origin. As an
+ exceptionally clever carpenter and polisher, he easily found regular
+ employment in the palace, and he contrived to make a rough plan of the
+ building. This plan, on which the dining-hall was marked with an ominous
+ red cross, fell into the hands of the police, and they made what they
+ considered a careful investigation; but they failed to unravel the plot
+ and did not discover the dynamite concealed in the carpenters' sleeping
+ quarters. Halturin showed wonderful coolness while the search was going
+ on, and continued to sleep every night on the explosive, though it caused
+ him excruciating headaches. When he was assured by the chemist of the
+ Executive Committee that the quantity collected was sufficient, he
+ exploded the mine at the usual dinner hour, and contrived to escape
+ uninjured.* In the guardroom immediately above the spot where the dynamite
+ was exploded ten soldiers were killed and 53 wounded, and in the
+ dining-hall the floor was wrecked, but the Imperial family escaped in
+ consequence of not sitting down to dinner at the usual hour.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * After living some time in Roumania he returned to Russia
+ under the name of Stepanof, and in 1882 he was tried and
+ executed for complicity in the assassination of General
+ Strebnekof.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ For this barbarous act the Executive Committee publicly accepted full
+ responsibility. In a proclamation placarded in the streets of St.
+ Petersburg it declared that, while regretting the death of the soldiers,
+ it was resolved to carry on the struggle with the Autocratic Power until
+ the social reforms should be entrusted to a Constituent Assembly, composed
+ of members freely elected and furnished with instructions from their
+ constituents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding police-repression so ineffectual, Alexander II. determined to try
+ the effect of conciliation, and for this purpose he placed Loris Melikof
+ at the head of the Government, with semi-dictatorial powers (February,
+ 1880). The experiment did not succeed. By the Terrorists it was regarded
+ as "a hypocritical Liberalism outwardly and a veiled brutality within,"
+ while in the official world it was condemned as an act of culpable
+ weakness on the part of the autocracy. One consequence of it was that the
+ Executive Committee was encouraged to continue its efforts, and, as the
+ police became much less active, it was enabled to improve the
+ revolutionary organisation. In a circular sent to the affiliated
+ provincial associations it explained that the only source of legislation
+ must be the national will,* and as the Government would never accept such
+ a principle, its hand must be forced by a great popular insurrection, for
+ which all available forces should be organised. The peasantry, as
+ experience had shown, could not yet be relied on, but efforts should be
+ made to enrol the workmen of the towns. Great importance was attached to
+ propaganda in the army; but as few conversions had been made among the
+ rank and file, attention was to be directed chiefly to the officers, who
+ would be able to carry their subordinates with them at the critical
+ moment.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Hence the designation Narodovoltsi (which, as we have
+ seen, means literally National-will-ists) adopted by this
+ section.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ While thus recommending the scheme of destroying autocracy by means of a
+ popular insurrection in the distant future, the Committee had not
+ abandoned more expeditious methods, and it was at that moment hatching a
+ plot for the assassination of the Tsar. During the winter months his
+ Majesty was in the habit of holding on Sundays a small parade in the
+ riding-school near the Michael Square in St. Petersburg. On Sunday, March
+ 3d, 1881, the streets by which he usually returned to the Palace had been
+ undermined at two places, and on an alternative route several conspirators
+ were posted with hand-grenades concealed under their great coats. The
+ Emperor chose the alternative route. Here, at a signal given by Sophia
+ Perovski, the first grenade was thrown by a student called Ryssakoff, but
+ it merely wounded some members of the escort. The Emperor stopped and got
+ out of his sledge, and as he was making inquiries about the wounded
+ soldiers a second grenade was thrown by a youth called Grinevitski, with
+ fatal effect. Alexander II. was conveyed hurriedly to the Winter Palace,
+ and died almost immediately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this act the members of the Executive Committee proved their energy and
+ their talent as conspirators, but they at the same time showed their
+ shortsightedness and their political incapacity; for they had made no
+ preparations for immediately seizing the power which they so ardently
+ coveted&mdash;with the intention of using it, of course, entirely for the
+ public good. If the facts were not so well authenticated, we might dismiss
+ the whole story as incredible. A group of young people, certainly not more
+ than thirty or forty in number, without any organised material force
+ behind them, without any influential accomplices in the army or the
+ official world, without any prospect of support from the masses, and with
+ no plan for immediate action after the assassination, deliberately
+ provoked the crisis for which they were so hopelessly unprepared. It has
+ been suggested that they expected the Liberals to seize the Supreme Power,
+ but this explanation is evidently an afterthought, because they knew that
+ the Liberals were as unprepared as themselves and they regarded them at
+ that time as dangerous rivals. Besides this, the explanation is quite
+ irreconcilable with the proclamation issued by the Executive Committee
+ immediately afterwards. The most charitable way of explaining the conduct
+ of the conspirators is to suppose that they were actuated more by blind
+ hatred of the autocracy and its agents than by political calculations of a
+ practical kind&mdash;that they acted simply like a wounded bull in the
+ arena, which shuts its eyes and recklessly charges its tormentors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The murder of the Emperor had not at all the effect which the Narodovoltsi
+ anticipated. On the contrary, it destroyed their hopes of success. Many
+ people of liberal convictions who sympathised vaguely with the
+ revolutionary movement without taking part in it, and who did not condemn
+ very severely the attacks on police officials, were horrified when they
+ found that the would-be reformers did not spare even the sacred person of
+ the Tsar. At the same time, the police officials, who had become lax and
+ inefficient under the conciliatory regime of Loris Melikof, recovered
+ their old zeal, and displayed such inordinate activity that the
+ revolutionary organisation was paralysed and in great measure destroyed.
+ Six of the regicides were condemned to death, and five of them publicly
+ executed, amongst the latter Sophia Perovski, one of the most active and
+ personally sympathetic personages among the revolutionists. Scores of
+ those who had taken an active part in the movement were in prison or in
+ exile. For a short time the propaganda was continued among military and
+ naval officers, and various attempts at reorganisation, especially in the
+ southern provinces, were made, but they all failed. A certain Degaief, who
+ had taken part in the formation of military circles, turned informer, and
+ aided the police. By his treachery not only a considerable number of
+ officers, but also Vera Filipof, a young lady of remarkable ability and
+ courage, who was the leading spirit in the attempts at reorganisation,
+ were arrested. There were still a number of leaders living abroad, and
+ from time to time they sent emissaries to revive the propaganda, but these
+ efforts were all fruitless. One of the active members of the revolutionary
+ party, Leo Deutsch, who has since published his Memoirs, relates how the
+ tide of revolution ebbed rapidly at this time. "Both in Russia and
+ abroad," he says, "I had seen how the earlier enthusiasm had given way to
+ scepticism; men had lost faith, though many of them would not allow that
+ it was so. It was clear to me that a reaction had set in for many years."
+ Of the attempts to resuscitate the movement he says: "The untried and
+ unskilfully managed societies were run to death before they could
+ undertake anything definite, and the unity and interdependence which
+ characterised the original band of members had disappeared." With regard
+ to the want of unity, another prominent revolutionist (Maslof) wrote to a
+ friend (Dragomanof) at Geneva in 1882 in terms of bitter complaint. He
+ accused the Executive Committee of trying to play the part of chief of the
+ whole revolutionary party, and declared that its centralising tendencies
+ were more despotic than those of the Government. Distributing orders among
+ its adherents without initiating them into its plans, it insisted on
+ unquestioning obedience. The Socialist youth, ardent adherents of
+ Federalism, were indignant at this treatment, and began to understand that
+ the Committee used them simply as chair a canon. The writer described in
+ vivid colours the mutual hostility which reigned among various fractions
+ of the party, and which manifested itself in accusations and even in
+ denunciations; and he predicted that the Narodnaya Volya, which had
+ organised the various acts of terrorism culminating in the assassination
+ of the Emperor, would never develop into a powerful revolutionary party.
+ It had sunk into the slough of untruth, and it could only continue to
+ deceive the Government and the public.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the mutual recriminations several interesting admissions were made. It
+ was recognised that neither the educated classes nor the common people
+ were capable of bringing about a revolution: the former were not numerous
+ enough, and the latter were devoted to the Tsar and did not sympathise
+ with the revolutionary movement, though they might perhaps be induced to
+ rise at a moment of crisis. It was considered doubtful whether such a
+ rising was desirable, because the masses, being insufficiently prepared,
+ might turn against the educated minority. In no case could a popular
+ insurrection attain the object which the Socialists had in view, because
+ the power would either remain in the hands of the Tsar&mdash;thanks to the
+ devotion of the common people&mdash;or it would fall into the hands of the
+ Liberals, who would oppress the masses worse than the autocratic
+ Government had done. Further, it was recognised that acts of terrorism
+ were worse than useless, because they were misunderstood by the ignorant,
+ and tended to inflame the masses against the leaders. It seemed necessary,
+ therefore, to return to a pacific propaganda. Tikhomirof, who was
+ nominally directing the movement from abroad, became utterly discouraged,
+ and wrote in 1884 to one of his emissaries in Russia (Lopatin): "You now
+ see Russia, and can convince yourself that it does not possess the
+ material for a vast work of reorganisation. . . . I advise you seriously
+ not to make superhuman efforts and not to make a scandal in attempting the
+ impossible. . . . If you do not want to satisfy yourself with trifles,
+ come away and await better times."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In examining the material relating to this period one sees clearly that
+ the revolutionary movement had got into a vicious circle. As pacific
+ propaganda had become impossible, in consequence of the opposition of the
+ authorities and the vigilance of the police, the Government could be
+ overturned only by a general insurrection; but the general insurrection
+ could not be prepared without pacific propaganda. As for terrorism, it had
+ become discredited. Tikhomirof himself came to the conclusion that the
+ terrorist idea was altogether a mistake, not only morally, but also from
+ the point of view of political expediency. A party, he explained, has
+ either the force to overthrow the Government, or it has not; in the former
+ case it has no need of political assassination, and in the latter the
+ assassinations have no effect, because Governments are not so stupid as to
+ let themselves be frightened by those who cannot overthrow them. Plainly
+ there was nothing to be done but to wait for better times, as he had
+ suggested, and the better times did not seem to be within measurable
+ distance. He himself, after publishing a brochure entitled "Why I Ceased
+ to Be a Revolutionist," made his peace with the Government, and others
+ followed his example.* In one prison nine made formal recantations, among
+ them Emilianof, who held a reserve bomb ready when Alexander II. was
+ assassinated. Occasional acts of terrorism showed that there was still
+ fire under the smouldering embers, but they were few and far between. The
+ last serious incident of the kind during this period was the regicide
+ conspiracy of Sheviryoff in March, 1887. The conspirators, carrying the
+ bombs, were arrested in the principal street of St. Petersburg, and five
+ of them were hanged. The railway accident of Borki, which happened in the
+ following year, and in which the Imperial family had a very narrow escape,
+ ought perhaps to be added to the list, because there is reason to believe
+ that it was the work of revolutionists.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Tikhomirof subsequently worked against the Social
+ Democrats in Moscow in the interests of the Government.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ By this time all the cooler heads among the revolutionists, especially
+ those who were living abroad in personal safety, had come to understand
+ that the Socialist ideal could not be attained by popular insurrection,
+ terrorism, or conspiracies, and consequently that further activity on the
+ old lines was absurd. Those of them who did not abandon the enterprise in
+ despair reverted to the idea that Autocratic Power, impregnable against
+ frontal attacks, might be destroyed by prolonged siege operations. This
+ change of tactics is reflected in the revolutionary literature. In 1889,
+ for example, the editor of the Svobodnaya Rossia declared that the aim of
+ the movement now was political freedom&mdash;not only as a stepping-stone
+ to social reorganisation, but as a good in itself. This is, he explains,
+ the only possible revolution at present in Russia. "For the moment there
+ can be no other immediate practical aim. Ulterior aims are not abandoned,
+ but they are not at present within reach. . . The revolutionists of the
+ seventies and the eighties did not succeed in creating among the peasantry
+ or the town workmen anything which had even the appearance of a force
+ capable of struggling with the Government; and the revolutionists of the
+ future will have no greater success until they have obtained such
+ political rights as personal inviolability. Our immediate aim, therefore,
+ is a National Assembly controlled by local self-government, and this can
+ be brought about only by a union of all the revolutionary forces."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were still indications, it is true, that the old spirit of terrorism
+ was not yet quite extinct: Captain Zolotykhin, for example, an officer of
+ the Moscow secret police, was assassinated by a female revolutionist in
+ 1890. But such incidents were merely the last fitful sputterings of a lamp
+ that was going out for want of oil. In 1892 Stepniak declared it evident
+ to all that the professional revolutionists could not alone overthrow
+ autocracy, however great their energy and heroism; and he arrived at the
+ same conclusion as the writer just quoted. Of course, immediate success
+ was not to be expected. "It is only from the evolutionist's point of view
+ that the struggle with autocracy has a meaning. From any other standpoint
+ it must seem a sanguinary farce&mdash;a mere exercise in the art of
+ self-sacrifice!" Such are the conclusions arrived at in 1892 by a man who
+ had been in 1878 one of the leading terrorists, and who had with his own
+ hand assassinated General Mezentsef, Chief of the Political Police.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the revolutionary movement, after passing through four stages, which
+ I may call the academic, the propagandist, the insurrectionary, and the
+ terrorist, had failed to accomplish its object. One of those who had taken
+ an active part in it, and who, after spending two years in Siberia as a
+ political exile, escaped and settled in Western Europe, could write thus:
+ "Our revolutionary movement is dead, and we who are still alive stand by
+ the grave of our beautiful departed and discuss what is wanting to her.
+ One of us thinks that her nose should be improved; another suggests a
+ change in her chin or her hair. We do not notice the essential that what
+ our beautiful departed wants is life; that it is not a matter of hair or
+ eyebrows, but of a living soul, which formerly concealed all defects, and
+ made her beautiful, and which now has flown away. However we may invent
+ changes and improvements, all these things are utterly insignificant in
+ comparison with what is really wanting, and what we cannot give; for who
+ can breathe a living soul into a corpse?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In truth, the movement which I have endeavoured to describe was at an end;
+ but another movement, having the same ultimate object, was coming into
+ existence, and it constitutes one of the essential factors of the present
+ situation. Some of the exiles in Switzerland and Paris had become
+ acquainted with the social-democratic and labour movements in Western
+ Europe, and they believed that the strategy and tactics employed in these
+ movements might be adopted in Russia. How far they have succeeded in
+ carrying out this policy I shall relate presently; but before entering on
+ this subject, I must explain how the application of such a policy had been
+ rendered possible by changes in the economic conditions. Russia had begun
+ to create rapidly a great manufacturing industry and an industrial
+ proletariat. This will form the subject of the next chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0036" id="link2HCH0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ INDUSTRIAL PROGRESS AND THE PROLETARIAT
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Russia till Lately a Peasant Empire&mdash;Early Efforts to Introduce Arts
+ and Crafts&mdash;Peter the Great and His Successors&mdash;Manufacturing
+ Industry Long Remains an Exotic&mdash;The Cotton Industry&mdash;The
+ Reforms of Alexander II.&mdash;Protectionists and Free Trade&mdash;Progress
+ under High Tariffs&mdash;M. Witte's Policy&mdash;How Capital Was Obtained&mdash;Increase
+ of Exports&mdash;Foreign Firms Cross the Customs Frontier&mdash;Rapid
+ Development of Iron Industry&mdash;A Commercial Crisis&mdash;M. Witte's
+ Position Undermined by Agrarians and Doctrinaires&mdash;M. Plehve a
+ Formidable Opponent&mdash;His Apprehensions of Revolution&mdash;Fall of M.
+ Witte&mdash;The Industrial Proletariat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fifty years ago Russia was still essentially a peasant empire, living by
+ agriculture of a primitive type, and supplying her other wants chiefly by
+ home industries, as was the custom in Western Europe during the Middle
+ Ages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For many generations her rulers had been trying to transplant into their
+ wide dominions the art and crafts of the West, but they had formidable
+ difficulties to contend with, and their success was not nearly as great as
+ they desired. We know that as far back as the fourteenth century there
+ were cloth-workers in Moscow, for we read in the chronicles that the
+ workshops of these artisans were sacked when the town was stormed by the
+ Tartars. Workers in metal had also appeared in some of the larger towns by
+ that time, but they do not seem to have risen much above the level of
+ ordinary blacksmiths. They were destined, however, to make more rapid
+ progress than other classes of artisans, because the old Tsars of Muscovy,
+ like other semi-barbarous potentates, admired and envied the industries of
+ more civilised countries mainly from the military point of view. What they
+ wanted most was a plentiful supply of good arms wherewith to defend
+ themselves and attack their neighbours, and it was to this object that
+ their most strenuous efforts were directed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As early as 1475 Ivan III., the grandfather of Ivan the Terrible, sent a
+ delegate to Venice to seek out for him an architect who, in addition to
+ his own craft, knew how to make guns; and in due course appeared in the
+ Kremlin a certain Muroli, called Aristotle by his contemporaries on
+ account of his profound learning. He undertook "to build churches and
+ palaces, to cast big bells and cannons, to fire off the said cannons, and
+ to make every sort of castings very cunningly"; and for the exercise of
+ these various arts it was solemnly stipulated in a formal document that he
+ should receive the modest salary of ten roubles monthly. With regard to
+ the military products, at least, the Venetian faithfully fulfilled his
+ contract, and in a short time the Tsar had the satisfaction of possessing
+ a "cannon-house," subsequently dignified with the name of "arsenal." Some
+ of the natives learned the foreign art, and exactly a century later (1856)
+ a Russian, or at least a Slav, called Tchekhof, produced a famous
+ "Tsar-cannon," weighing as much as 96,000 lbs. The connection thus
+ established with the mechanical arts of the West was always afterwards
+ maintained, and we find frequent notices of the fact in contemporary
+ writers. In the reign of the grandfather of Peter the Great, for example,
+ two paper-works were established by an Italian; and velvet for the Tsar
+ and his Boyars, gold brocades for ecclesiastical vestments, and rude kinds
+ of glass for ordinary purposes were manufactured under the august
+ patronage of the enlightened ruler. His son Alexis went a good many steps
+ further, and scandalised his God-fearing orthodox subjects by his love of
+ foreign heretical inventions. It was in his German suburb of Moscow that
+ young Peter, who was to be crowned "the Great," made his first
+ acquaintance with the useful arts of the West.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the great reformer came to the throne he found in his Tsardom,
+ besides many workshops, some ten foundries, all of which were under orders
+ "to cast cannons, bombs, and bullets, and to make arms for the service of
+ the State." This seemed to him only a beginning, especially for the mining
+ and iron industry, in which he was particularly interested. By importing
+ foreign artificers and placing at their disposal big estates, with
+ numerous serfs, in the districts where minerals were plentiful, and by
+ carefully stipulating that these foreigners should teach his subjects
+ well, and conceal from them none of the secrets of the craft, he created
+ in the Ural a great iron industry, which still exists at the present day.
+ Finding by experience that State mines and State ironworks were a heavy
+ drain on his insufficiently replenished treasury, he transferred some of
+ them to private persons, and this policy was followed occasionally by his
+ successors. Hence the gigantic fortunes of the Demidofs and other
+ families. The Shuvalovs, for example, in 1760 possessed, for the purpose
+ of working their mines and ironworks, no less than 33,000 serfs and a
+ corresponding amount of land. Unfortunately the concessions were generally
+ given not to enterprising business-men, but to influential
+ court-dignitaries, who confined their attention to squandering the
+ revenues, and not a few of the mines and works reverted to the Government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The army required not only arms and ammunition, but also uniforms and
+ blankets. Great attention, therefore, was paid to the woollen industry
+ from the reign of Peter downwards. In the time of Catherine there were
+ already 120 cloth factories, but they were on a very small scale,
+ according to modern conceptions. Ten factories in Moscow, for example, had
+ amongst them only 104 looms, 130 workers, and a yearly output for 200,000
+ roubles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While thus largely influenced in its economic policy by military
+ considerations, the Government did not entirely neglect other branches of
+ manufacturing industry. Ever since Russia had pretensions to being a
+ civilised power its rulers have always been inclined to pay more attention
+ to the ornamental than the useful&mdash;to the varnish rather than the
+ framework of civilisation&mdash;and we need not therefore be surprised to
+ find that long before the native industry could supply the materials
+ required for the ordinary wants of humble life, attempts were made to
+ produce such things as Gobelin tapestries. I mention this merely as an
+ illustration of a characteristic trait of the national character, the
+ influence of which may be found in many other spheres of official
+ activity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Russia did not attain the industrial level of Western Europe, it was
+ not from want of ambition and effort on the part of the rulers. They
+ worked hard, if not always wisely, for this end. Manufacturers were
+ exempted from rates and taxes, and even from military service, and some of
+ them, as I have said, received large estates from the Crown on the
+ understanding that the serfs should be employed as workmen. At the same
+ time they were protected from foreign competition by prohibitive tariffs.
+ In a word, the manufacturing industry was nursed and fostered in a way to
+ satisfy the most thorough-going protectionist, especially those branches
+ which worked up native raw material such as ores, flax, hemp, wool, and
+ tallow. Occasionally the official interference and anxiety to protect
+ public interests went further than the manufacturers desired. On more than
+ one occasion the authorities fixed the price of certain kinds of
+ manufactured goods, and in 1754 the Senate, being anxious to protect the
+ population from fires, ordered all glass and iron works within a radius of
+ 200 versts around Moscow to be destroyed! In spite of such obstacles, the
+ manufacturing industry as a whole made considerable progress. Between 1729
+ and 1762 the number of establishments officially recognised as factories
+ rose from 26 to 335.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These results did not satisfy Catherine II., who ascended the throne in
+ 1762. Under the influence of her friends, the French Encyclopedistes, she
+ imagined for a time that the official control might be relaxed, and that
+ the system of employing serfs in the factories and foundries might be
+ replaced by free labour, as in Western Europe; monopolies might be
+ abolished, and all liege subjects, including the peasants, might be
+ allowed to embark in industrial undertakings as they pleased, "for the
+ benefit of the State and the nation." All this looked very well on paper,
+ but Catherine never allowed her sentimental liberalism to injure seriously
+ the interests of her Empire, and she accordingly refrained from putting
+ the laissez-faire principle largely into practice. Though a good deal has
+ been written about her economic policy, it is hardly distinguishable from
+ that of her predecessors. Like them, she maintained high tariffs, accorded
+ large subsidies, and even prevented the export of raw material, in the
+ hope that it might be worked up at home; and when the prices in the
+ woollen market rose very high, she compelled the manufacturers to supply
+ the army with cloth at a price fixed by the authorities. In short, the old
+ system remained practically unimpaired, and notwithstanding the steady
+ progress made during the reign of Nicholas I. (1825-55), when the number
+ of factory hands rose from 210,000 to 380,000, the manufacturing industry
+ as a whole continued to be, until the serfs were emancipated in 1861, a
+ hothouse plant which could flourish only in an officially heated
+ atmosphere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was one branch of it, however, to which this remark does not apply.
+ The art of cotton-spinning and cotton-weaving struck deep root in Russian
+ soil. After remaining for generations in the condition of a cottage
+ industry&mdash;the yarn being distributed among the peasants and worked up
+ by them in their own homes&mdash;it began, about 1825, to be modernised.
+ Though it still required to be protected against foreign competition, it
+ rapidly outgrew the necessity for direct official support. Big factories
+ driven by steam-power were constructed, the number of hands employed rose
+ to 110,000, and the foundations of great fortunes were laid. Strange to
+ say, many of the future millionaires were uneducated serfs. Sava Morozof,
+ for example, who was to become one of the industrial magnates of Moscow,
+ was a serf belonging to a proprietor called Ryumin; most of the others
+ were serfs of Count Sheremetyef&mdash;the owner of a large estate on which
+ the industrial town of Ivanovo had sprung up&mdash;who was proud of having
+ millionaires among his serfs, and who never abused his authority over
+ them. The great movement, however, was not effected without the assistance
+ of foreigners. Foreign foremen were largely employed, and in the work of
+ organisation a leading part was played by a German called Ludwig Knoop.
+ Beginning life as a commercial traveller for an English firm, he soon
+ became a large cotton importer, and when in 1840 a feverish activity was
+ produced in the Russian manufacturing world by the Government's permission
+ to import English machines, his firm supplied these machines to the
+ factories on condition of obtaining a share in the business. It has been
+ calculated that it obtained in this way a share in no less than 122
+ factories, and hence arose among the peasantry a popular saying:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Where there is a church, there you find a pope,
+ And where there is a factory, there you find a Knoop."*
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The biggest creation of the firm was a factory built at Narva in 1856,
+ with nearly half a million spindles driven by water-power.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Gdye tserkov&mdash;tam pop;
+ A gdye fabrika&mdash;tam Knop.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the second half of last century a revolution was brought about in the
+ manufacturing industry generally by the emancipation of the serfs, the
+ rapid extension of railways, the facilities for creating limited liability
+ companies, and by certain innovations in the financial policy of the
+ Government. The emancipation put on the market an unlimited supply of
+ cheap labour; the construction of railways in all directions increased a
+ hundredfold the means of communication; and the new banks and other credit
+ institutions, aided by an overwhelming influx of foreign capital,
+ encouraged the foundation and extension of industrial and commercial
+ enterprise of every description. For a time there was great excitement. It
+ was commonly supposed that in all matters relating to trade and industry
+ Russia had suddenly jumped up to the level of Western Europe, and many
+ people in St. Petersburg, carried away by the prevailing enthusiasm for
+ liberalism in general and the doctrines of Free Trade in particular, were
+ in favour of abolishing protectionism as an antiquated restriction on
+ liberty and an obstacle to economic progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At one moment the Government was disposed to yield to the current, but it
+ was restrained by an influential group of conservative Political
+ Economists, who appealed to patriotic sentiment, and by the Moscow
+ manufacturers, who declared that Free Trade would ruin the country. After
+ a little hesitation it proceeded to raise, instead of lowering, the
+ protectionist tariff. In 1869-76 the ad valorem duties were, on an
+ average, under thirteen per cent., but from that time onwards they rose
+ steadily, until the last five years of the century, when they averaged
+ thirty-three per cent., and were for some articles very much higher. In
+ this way the Moscow industrial magnates were protected against the influx
+ of cheap foreign goods, but they were not saved from foreign competition,
+ for many foreign manufacturers, in order to enjoy the benefit of the high
+ duties, founded factories in Russia. Even the firmly established cotton
+ industry suffered from these intruders. Industrial suburbs containing not
+ a few cotton factories sprang up around St. Petersburg; and a small Polish
+ village called Lodz, near the German frontier, grew rapidly into a
+ prosperous town of 300,000 inhabitants, and became a serious rival to the
+ ancient Muscovite capital. So severely was the competition of this young
+ upstart felt, that the Moscow merchants petitioned the Emperor to protect
+ them by drawing a customs frontier round the Polish provinces, but their
+ petition was not granted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the shelter of the high tariffs the manufacturing industry as a
+ whole has made rapid progress, and the cotton trade has kept well to the
+ front. In that branch, between 1861 and 1897, the number of hands employed
+ rose from 120,000 to 325,000, and the estimated value of the products from
+ 72 to 478 millions of roubles. In 1899 the number of spindles was
+ considerably over six millions, and the number of automatic weaving
+ machines 145,000.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The iron industry has likewise progressed rapidly, though it has not yet
+ outgrown the necessity for Government support, and it is not yet able to
+ provide for all home wants. About forty years ago it received a powerful
+ impulse from the discovery that in the provinces to the north of the
+ Crimea and the Sea of Azof there were enormous quantities of iron ore and
+ beds of good coal in close proximity to each other. Thanks to this
+ discovery and to other facts of which I shall have occasion to speak
+ presently, this district, which had previously been agricultural and
+ pastoral, has outstripped the famous Ural region, and has become the Black
+ Country of Russia. The vast lonely steppe, where formerly one saw merely
+ the peasant-farmer, the shepherd, and the Tchumak,* driving along
+ somnolently with his big, long-horned, white bullocks, is now dotted over
+ with busy industrial settlements of mushroom growth, and great ironworks&mdash;some
+ of them unfinished; while at night the landscape is lit up with the lurid
+ flames of gigantic blast-furnaces. In this wonderful transformation, as in
+ the history of Russian industrial progress generally, a great part was
+ played by foreigners. The pioneer who did most in this district was an
+ Englishman, John Hughes, who began life as the son and pupil of a Welsh
+ blacksmith, and whose sons are now directors of the biggest of the South
+ Russian ironworks.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The Tchumak, a familiar figure in the songs and legends of
+ Little Russia, was the carrier who before the construction
+ of railways transported the grain to the great markets, and
+ brought back merchandise to the interior. He is gradually
+ disappearing.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Much as the South has progressed industrially in recent years, it still
+ remains far behind those industrial portions of the country which were
+ thickly settled at an earlier date. From this point of view the most
+ important region is the group of provinces clustering round Moscow; next
+ comes the St. Petersburg region, including Livonia; and thirdly Poland. As
+ for the various kinds of industry, the most important category is that of
+ textile fabrics, the second that of articles of nutrition, and the third
+ that of ores and metals. The total production, if we may believe certain
+ statistical authorities, places Russia now among the industrial nations of
+ the world in the fifth place, immediately after the United States,
+ England, Germany, and France, and a little before Austria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man who has in recent times carried out most energetically the policy
+ of protecting and fostering native industries is M. Witte, a name now
+ familiar to Western Europe. An avowed disciple of the great German
+ economist, Friedrich List, about whose works he published a brochure in
+ 1888, he held firmly, from his youth upwards, the doctrine that "each
+ nation should above all things develop harmoniously its natural resources
+ to the highest possible degree of independence, protecting its own
+ industries and preferring the national aim to the pecuniary advantage of
+ individuals." As a corollary to this principle he declared that purely
+ agricultural countries are economically backward and intellectually
+ stagnant, being condemned to pay tribute to the nations who have learned
+ to work up their raw products into more valuable commodities. The good old
+ English doctrine that certain countries were intended by Providence to be
+ eternally agricultural, and that their function in the economy of the
+ universe is to supply raw material for the industrial nations, was always
+ in his eyes an abomination&mdash;an ingenious, nefarious invention of the
+ Manchester school, astutely invented for the purpose of keeping the
+ younger nations permanently in a state of economic bondage for the benefit
+ of English manufacturers. To emancipate Russia from this thraldom by
+ enabling her to create a great native industry, sufficient to supply all
+ her own wants, was the aim of his policy and the constant object of his
+ untiring efforts. Those who have had the good fortune to know him
+ personally must have often heard him discourse eloquently on this theme,
+ supporting his views by quotations from the economists of his own school,
+ and by illustrations drawn from the history of his own and other
+ countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A necessary condition of realising this aim was that there should be high
+ tariffs. These already existed, and they might be raised still higher, but
+ in themselves they were not enough. For the rapid development of the
+ native industry an enormous capital was required, and the first problem to
+ be solved was how this capital could be obtained. At one moment the
+ energetic minister conceived the project of creating a fictitious capital
+ by inflating the paper currency; but this idea proved unpopular. When
+ broached in the Council of State it encountered determined opposition.
+ Some of the members of that body, especially M. Bunge, who had been
+ himself Minister of Finance, and who remembered the evil effects of the
+ inordinate inflation of the currency on foreign exchanges during the
+ Turkish War, advocated strongly the directly opposite course&mdash;a
+ return to gold monometallism, for which M. Vishnegradski, M. Witte's
+ immediate predecessor, had made considerable preparations. Being a
+ practical man without inveterate prejudices, M. Witte gave up the scheme
+ which he could not carry through, and adopted the views of his opponents.
+ He would introduce the gold currency as recommended; but how was the
+ requisite capital to be obtained? It must be procured from abroad,
+ somehow, and the simplest way seemed to be to stimulate the export of
+ native products. For this purpose the railways were extended,* the traffic
+ rates manipulated, and the means of transport improved generally.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * In 1892, when M. Witte undertook the financial
+ administration, there were 30,620 versts of railway, and at
+ the end of 1900 there were 51,288 versts.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A certain influx of gold was thus secured, but not nearly enough for the
+ object in view.* Some more potent means, therefore, had to be employed,
+ and the inventive minister evolved a new scheme. If he could only induce
+ foreign capitalists to undertake manufacturing industries in Russia, they
+ would, at one and the same time, bring into the country the capital
+ required, and they would cooperate powerfully in that development of the
+ national industry which he so ardently wished. No sooner had he roughly
+ sketched out his plan&mdash;for he was not a man to let the grass grow
+ under his feet&mdash;than he set himself to put it into execution by
+ letting it be known in the financial world that the Government was ready
+ to open a great field for lucrative investments, in the form of profitable
+ enterprises under the control of those who subscribed the capital.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * In 1891 the total value of the exports was roughly
+ 70,000,000 pounds. It then fell, in consequence of bad
+ harvests, to 45 millions, and did not recover the previous
+ maximum until 1897, when it stood at 73 millions.
+ Thereafter there was a steady rise till 1901, when the total
+ was estimated at 76 millions.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Foreign capitalists responded warmly to the call. Crowds of
+ concession-hunters, projectors, company promoters, et hoc genus omne,
+ collected in St. Petersburg, offering their services on the most tempting
+ terms; and all of them who could make out a plausible case were well
+ received at the Ministry of Finance. It was there explained to them that
+ in many branches of industry, such as the manufacture of textile fabrics,
+ there was little or no room for newcomers, but that in others the
+ prospects were most brilliant. Take, for example, the iron industries of
+ Southern Russia. The boundless mineral wealth of that region was still
+ almost intact, and the few works which had been there established were
+ paying very large dividends. The works founded by John Hughes, for
+ example, had repeatedly divided considerably over twenty per cent., and
+ there was little fear for the future, because the Government had embarked
+ on a great scheme of railway extension, requiring an unlimited amount of
+ rails and rolling-stock. What better opening could be desired? Certainly
+ the opening seemed most attractive, and into it rushed the crowd of
+ company promoters, followed by stock-jobbers and brokers, playing lively
+ pieces of what the Germans call Zukunftsmusik. An unwary and confiding
+ public, especially in Belgium and France, listened to the enchanting
+ strains of the financial syrens, and invested largely. Quickly the number
+ of completed ironworks in that region rose from nine to seventeen, and in
+ the short space of three years the output of pig-iron was nearly doubled.
+ In 1900 there were 44 blast furnaces in working order, and ten more were
+ in course of construction. And all this time the Imperial revenue
+ increased by leaps and bounds, so that the introduction of the gold
+ currency was effected without difficulty. M. Witte was declared to be the
+ greatest minister of his time&mdash;a Russian Colbert or Turgot, or
+ perhaps the two rolled into one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came a change. Competition and over-production led naturally to a
+ fall in prices, and at the same time the demand decreased, because the
+ railway-building activity of the Government slackened. Alarmed at this
+ state of things, the banks which had helped to start and foster the huge
+ and costly enterprises contracted their credits. By the end of 1899 the
+ disenchantment was general and widespread. Some of the companies were so
+ weighted by the preliminary financial obligations, and had conducted their
+ affairs in such careless, reckless fashion, that they had soon to shut
+ down their mines and close their works. Even solid undertakings suffered.
+ The shares of the Briansk works, for example, which had given dividends as
+ high as 30 per cent., fell from 500 to 230. The Mamontof companies&mdash;supposed
+ to be one of the strongest financial groups in the country&mdash;had to
+ suspend payment, and numerous other failures occurred. Nearly all the
+ commercial banks, having directly participated in the industrial concerns,
+ were rudely shaken. M. Witte, who had been for a time the idol of a
+ certain section of the financial world, became very unpopular, and was
+ accused of misleading the investing public. Among the accusations brought
+ against him some at least could easily be refuted. He may have made
+ mistakes in his policy, and may have been himself over-sanguine, but
+ surely, as he subsequently replied to his accusers, it was no part of his
+ duty to warn company promoters and directors that they should refrain from
+ over-production, and that their enterprises might not be as remunerative
+ as they expected. As to whether there is any truth in the assertion that
+ he held out prospects of larger Government orders than he actually gave, I
+ cannot say. That he cut down prices, and showed himself a hard man to deal
+ with, there seems no doubt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader may naturally be inclined to jump to the conclusion that the
+ commercial crisis just referred to was the cause of M. Witte's fall. Such
+ a conclusion would be entirely erroneous. The crisis happened in the
+ winter of 1899-1900, and M. Witte remained Finance Minister until the
+ autumn of 1903. His fall was the result of causes of a totally different
+ kind, and these I propose now to explain, because the explanation will
+ throw light on certain very curious and characteristic conceptions at
+ present current in the Russian educated classes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course there were certain causes of a purely personal kind, but I shall
+ dismiss them in a very few words. I remember once asking a well-informed
+ friend of M. Witte's what he thought of him as an administrator and a
+ statesman. The friend replied: "Imagine a negro of the Gold Coast let
+ loose in modern European civilisation!" This reply, like most epigrammatic
+ remarks, is a piece of gross exaggeration, but it has a modicum of truth
+ in it. In the eyes of well-trained Russian officials M. Witte was a
+ titanic, reckless character, capable at any moment of playing the part of
+ the bull in the china-shop. As a masterful person, brusque in manner and
+ incapable of brooking contradiction, he had made for himself many enemies;
+ and his restless, irrepressible energy had led him to encroach on the
+ provinces of all his colleagues. Possessing as he did the control of the
+ purse, his interference could not easily be resisted. The Ministers of
+ Interior, War, Agriculture, Public Works, Public Instruction, and Foreign
+ Affairs had all occasion to complain of his incursions into their
+ departments. In contrast to his colleagues, he was not only extremely
+ energetic, but he was ever ready to assume an astounding amount of
+ responsibility; and as he was something of an opportunist, he was perhaps
+ not always quixotically scrupulous in the choice of expedients for
+ attaining his ends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Altogether M. Witte was an inconvenient personage in an administration in
+ which strong personality is regarded as entirely out of place, and in
+ which personal initiative is supposed to reside exclusively in the Tsar.
+ In addition to all this he was a man who felt keenly, and when he was
+ irritated he did not always keep the unruly member under strict control.
+ If I am correctly informed, it was some imprudent and not very respectful
+ remarks, repeated by a subordinate and transmitted by a Grand Duke to the
+ Tsar, which were the immediate cause of his transfer from the influential
+ post of Minister of Finance to the ornamental position of President of the
+ Council of Ministers; but that was merely the proverbial last straw that
+ broke the camel's back. His position was already undermined, and it is the
+ undermining process which I wish to describe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first to work for his overthrow were the Agrarian Conservatives. They
+ could not deny that, from the purely fiscal point of view, his
+ administration was a marvellous success; for he was rapidly doubling the
+ revenue, and he had succeeded in replacing the fluctuating depreciated
+ paper currency by a gold coinage; but they maintained that he was killing
+ the goose that laid the golden eggs. Evidently the tax-paying power of the
+ rural classes was being overstrained, for they were falling more and more
+ into arrears in the payment of their taxes, and their impoverishment was
+ yearly increasing. All their reserves had been exhausted, as was shown by
+ the famines of 1891-92, when the Government had to spend hundreds of
+ millions to feed them. Whilst the land was losing its fertility, those who
+ had to live by it were increasing in numbers at an alarming rate. Already
+ in some districts one-fifth of the peasant households had no longer any
+ land of their own, and of those who still possessed land a large
+ proportion had no longer the cattle and horses necessary to till and
+ manure their allotments. No doubt M. Witte was beginning to perceive his
+ mistake, and had done something to palliate the evils by improving the
+ system of collecting the taxes and abolishing the duty on passports, but
+ such merely palliative remedies could have little effect. While a few
+ capitalists were amassing gigantic fortunes, the masses were slowly and
+ surely advancing to the brink of starvation. The welfare of the
+ agriculturists, who constitute nine-tenths of the whole population, was
+ being ruthlessly sacrificed, and for what? For the creation of a
+ manufacturing industry which rested on an artificial, precarious basis,
+ and which had already begun to decline.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So far the Agrarians, who champion the interests of the agricultural
+ classes. Their views were confirmed and their arguments strengthened by an
+ influential group of men whom I may call, for want of a better name, the
+ philosophers or doctrinaire interpreters of history, who have, strange to
+ say, more influence in Russia than in any other country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russian educated classes desire that the nation should be wealthy and
+ self-supporting, and they recognise that for this purpose a large
+ manufacturing industry is required; but they are reluctant to make the
+ sacrifices necessary to attain the object in view, and they imagine that,
+ somehow or other, these sacrifices may be avoided. Sympathising with this
+ frame of mind, the doctrinaires explain that the rich and prosperous
+ countries of Europe and America obtained their wealth and prosperity by
+ so-called "Capitalism"&mdash;that is to say, by a peculiar social
+ organisation in which the two main factors are a small body of rich
+ capitalists and manufacturers and an enormous pauper proletariat living
+ from hand to mouth, at the mercy of the heartless employers of labour.
+ Russia has lately followed in the footsteps of those wealthy countries,
+ and if she continues to do so she will inevitably be saddled with the same
+ disastrous results&mdash;plutocracy, pauperism, unrestrained competition
+ in all spheres of activity, and a greatly intensified struggle for life,
+ in which the weaker will necessarily go to the wall.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Free competition in all spheres of activity, leading to
+ social inequality, plutocracy, and pauperism, is the
+ favourite bugbear of Russian theorists; and who is not a
+ theorist in Russia? The fact indicates the prevalence of
+ Socialist ideas in the educated classes.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Happily there is, according to these theorists, a more excellent way, and
+ Russia can adopt it if she only remains true to certain mysterious
+ principles of her past historic development. Without attempting to expound
+ those mysterious principles, to which I have repeatedly referred in
+ previous chapters, I may mention briefly that the traditional patriarchal
+ institutions on which the theorists found their hopes of a happy social
+ future for their country are the rural Commune, the native
+ home-industries, and the peculiar co-operative institutions called Artels.
+ How these remnants of a semi-patriarchal state of society are to be
+ practically developed in such a way as to withstand the competition of
+ manufacturing industry organised on modern "capitalist" lines, no one has
+ hitherto been able to explain satisfactorily, but many people indulge in
+ ingenious speculations on the subject, like children planning the means of
+ diverting with their little toy spades a formidable inundation. In my
+ humble opinion, the whole theory is a delusion; but it is held firmly&mdash;I
+ might almost say fanatically&mdash;by those who, in opposition to the
+ indiscriminate admirers of West-European and American civilisation,
+ consider themselves genuine Russians and exceptionally good patriots. M.
+ Witte has never belonged to that class. He believes that there is only one
+ road to national prosperity&mdash;the road by which Western Europe has
+ travelled&mdash;and along this road he tried to drive his country as
+ rapidly as possible. He threw himself, therefore, heart and soul into what
+ his opponents call "Capitalism," by raising State loans, organising banks
+ and other credit institutions, encouraging the creation and extension of
+ big factories, which must inevitably destroy the home industry, and even&mdash;horribile
+ dictu!&mdash;undermining the rural Commune, and thereby adding to the
+ ranks of the landless proletariat, in order to increase the amount of
+ cheap labour for the benefit of the capitalists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the arguments thus supplied by Agrarians and doctrinaires, quite
+ honest and well-meaning, according to their lights, it was easy to sap M.
+ Witte's position. Among his opponents, the most formidable was the late M.
+ Plehve, Minister of Interior&mdash;a man of a totally different stamp. A
+ few months before his tragic end I had a long and interesting conversation
+ with him, and I came away deeply impressed. Having repeatedly had
+ conversations of a similar kind with M. Witte, I could compare, or rather
+ contrast, the two men. Both of them evidently possessed an exceptional
+ amount of mental power and energy, but in the one it was volcanic, and in
+ the other it was concentrated and thoroughly under control. In discussion,
+ the one reminded me of the self-taught, slashing swordsman; the other of
+ the dexterous fencer, carefully trained in the use of the foils, who never
+ launches out beyond the point at which he can quickly recover himself. As
+ to whether M. Plehve was anything more than a bold, energetic, clever
+ official there may be differences of opinion, but he certainly could
+ assume the airs of a profound and polished statesman, capable of looking
+ at things from a much higher point of view than the ordinary tchinovnik,
+ and he had the talent of tacitly suggesting that a great deal of genuine,
+ enlightened statesmanship lay hidden under the smooth surface of his
+ cautious reserve. Once or twice I could perceive that when criticising the
+ present state of things he had his volcanic colleague in his mind's eye;
+ but the covert allusions were so vague and so carefully worded that the
+ said colleague, if he had been present, would hardly have been justified
+ in entering a personal protest. A statesman of the higher type, I was made
+ to feel, should deal not with personalities, but with things, and it would
+ be altogether unbecoming to complain of a colleague in presence of an
+ outsider. Thus his attitude towards his opponent was most correct, but it
+ was not difficult to infer that he had little sympathy with the policy of
+ the Ministry of Finance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From other sources I learned the cause of this want of sympathy. Being
+ Minister of Interior, and having served long in the Police Department, M.
+ Plehve considered that his first duty was the maintenance of public order
+ and the protection of the person and autocracy of his august master. He
+ was therefore the determined enemy of revolutionary tendencies, in
+ whatever garb or disguise they might appear; and as a statesman he had to
+ direct his attention to everything likely to increase those tendencies in
+ the future. Now it seemed that in the financial policy which had been
+ followed for some years there were germs of future revolutionary
+ fermentation. The peasantry were becoming impoverished, and were therefore
+ more likely to listen to the insidious suggestions of Socialist agitators;
+ and already agrarian disturbances had occurred in the provinces of Kharkof
+ and Poltava. The industrial proletariat which was being rapidly created
+ was being secretly organised by the revolutionary Social Democrats, and
+ already there had been serious labour troubles in some of the large towns.
+ For any future revolutionary movement the proletariat would naturally
+ supply recruits. Then, at the other end of the social scale, a class of
+ rich capitalists was being created, and everybody who has read a little
+ history knows that a rich and powerful tiers etat cannot be permanently
+ conciliated with autocracy. Though himself neither an agrarian nor a
+ Slavophil doctrinaire, M. Plehve could not but have a certain sympathy
+ with those who were forging thunderbolts for the official annihilation of
+ M. Witte. He was too practical a man to imagine that the hands on the dial
+ of economic progress could be set back and a return made to moribund
+ patriarchal institutions; but he thought that at least the pace might be
+ moderated. The Minister of Finance need not be in such a desperate,
+ reckless hurry, and it was desirable to create conservative forces which
+ might counteract the revolutionary forces which his impulsive colleague
+ was inadvertently calling into existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the forgers of thunderbolts went a great deal further, and
+ asserted or insinuated that M. Witte was himself consciously a
+ revolutionist, with secret, malevolent intentions. In support of their
+ insinuations they cited certain cases in which well-known Socialists had
+ been appointed professors in academies under the control of the Ministry
+ of Finance, and they pointed to the Peasant Bank, which enjoyed M. Witte's
+ special protection. At first it had been supposed that the bank would have
+ an anti-revolutionary influence by preventing the formation of a landless
+ proletariat and increasing the number of small land-owners, who are always
+ and everywhere conservative so far as the rights of private property are
+ concerned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately its success roused the fears of the more conservative
+ section of the landed proprietors. These gentlemen, as I have already
+ mentioned, pointed out that the estates of the nobles were rapidly passing
+ into the hands of the peasantry, and that if this process were allowed to
+ continue the hereditary Noblesse, which had always been the civilising
+ element in the rural population, and the surest support of the throne,
+ would drift into the towns and there sink into poverty or amalgamate with
+ the commercial plutocracy, and help to form a tiers etat which would be
+ hostile to the Autocratic Power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In these circumstances it was evident that the headstrong Minister of
+ Finance could maintain his position only so long as he enjoyed the
+ energetic support of the Emperor, and this support, for reasons which I
+ have indicated above, failed him at the critical moment. When his work was
+ still unfinished he was suddenly compelled, by the Emperor's command, to
+ relinquish his post and accept a position in which, it was supposed, he
+ would cease to have any influence in the administration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus fell the Russian Colbert-Turgot, or whatever else he may be called.
+ Whether financial difficulties in the future will lead to his
+ reinstatement as Minister of Finance remains to be seen; but in any case
+ his work cannot be undone. He has increased manufacturing industry to an
+ unprecedented extent, and, as M. Plehve perceived, the industrial
+ proletariat which manufacturing industry on capitalist lines always
+ creates has provided a new field of activity for the revolutionists. I
+ return, therefore, to the evolution of the revolutionary movement in order
+ to describe its present phase, the first-fruits of which have been
+ revealed in the labour disturbances in St. Petersburg and other industrial
+ centres.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0037" id="link2HCH0037">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXVII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE REVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENT IN ITS LATEST PHASE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Influence of Capitalism and Proletariat on the Revolutionary Movement&mdash;What
+ is to be Done?&mdash;Reply of Plekhanof&mdash;A New Departure&mdash;Karl
+ Marx's Theories Applied to Russia&mdash;Beginnings of a Social Democratic
+ Movement&mdash;The Labour Troubles of 1894-96 in St. Petersburg&mdash;The
+ Social Democrats' Plan of Campaign&mdash;Schism in the Party&mdash;Trade-unionism
+ and Political Agitation&mdash;The Labour Troubles of 1902&mdash;How the
+ Revolutionary Groups are Differentiated from Each Other&mdash;Social
+ Democracy and Constitutionalism&mdash;Terrorism&mdash;The Socialist
+ Revolutionaries&mdash;The Militant Organisation&mdash;Attitude of the
+ Government&mdash;Factory Legislation&mdash;Government's Scheme for
+ Undermining Social Democracy&mdash;Father Gapon and His Labour Association&mdash;The
+ Great Strike in St. Petersburg&mdash;Father Gapon goes over to the
+ Revolutionaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The development of manufacturing industry on capitalist lines, and the
+ consequent formation of a large industrial proletariat, produced great
+ disappointment in all the theorising sections of the educated classes. The
+ thousands of men and women who had, since the accession of the
+ Tsar-Emancipator in 1855, taken a keen, enthusiastic interest in the
+ progress of their native country, all had believed firmly that in some way
+ or other Russia would escape "the festering sores of Western
+ civilisation." Now experience had proved that the belief was an illusion,
+ and those who had tried to check the natural course of industrial progress
+ were constrained to confess that their efforts had been futile. Big
+ factories were increasing in size and numbers, while cottage industries
+ were disappearing or falling under the power of middlemen, and the Artels
+ had not advanced a step in their expected development. The factory
+ workers, though all of peasant origin, were losing their connection with
+ their native villages and abandoning their allotments of the Communal
+ land. They were becoming, in short, a hereditary caste in the town
+ population, and the pleasant Slavophil dream of every factory worker
+ having a house in the country was being rudely dispelled. Nor was there
+ any prospect of a change for the better in the future. With the increase
+ of competition among the manufacturers, the uprooting of the muzhik from
+ the soil must go on more and more rapidly, because employers must insist
+ more and more on having thoroughly trained operatives ready to work
+ steadily all the year round.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This state of things had a curious effect on the course of the
+ revolutionary movement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me recall very briefly the successive stages through which the
+ movement had already passed. It had been inaugurated, as we have seen, by
+ the Nihilists, the ardent young representatives of a "storm-and-stress"
+ period, in which the venerable traditions and respected principles of the
+ past were rejected and ridiculed, and the newest ideas of Western Europe
+ were eagerly adopted and distorted. Like the majority of their educated
+ countrymen, they believed that in the race of progress Russia was about to
+ overtake and surpass the nations of the West, and that this desirable
+ result was to be attained by making a tabula rasa of existing
+ institutions, and reconstructing society according to the plans of
+ Proudhon, Fourier, and the other writers of the early Socialist school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Nihilists had expended their energies and exhausted the patience
+ of the public in theorising, talking, and writing, a party of action came
+ upon the scene. Like the Nihilists, they desired political, social, and
+ economic reforms of the most thorough-going kind, but they believed that
+ such things could not be effected by the educated classes alone, and they
+ determined to call in the co-operation of the people. For this purpose
+ they tried to convert the masses to the gospel of Socialism. Hundreds of
+ them became missionaries and "went in among the people." But the gospel of
+ Socialism proved unintelligible to the uneducated, and the more ardent,
+ incautious missionaries fell into the hands of the police. Those of them
+ who escaped, perceiving the error of their ways, but still clinging to the
+ hope of bringing about a political, social, and economic revolution,
+ determined to change their tactics. The emancipated serf had shown himself
+ incapable of "prolonged revolutionary activity," but there was reason to
+ believe that he was, like his forefathers in the time of Stenka Razin and
+ Pugatcheff, capable of rising and murdering his oppressors. He must be
+ used, therefore, for the destruction of the Autocratic Power and the
+ bureaucracy, and then it would be easy to reorganise society on a basis of
+ universal equality, and to take permanent precautions against capitalism
+ and the creation of a proletariat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hopes of the agitators proved as delusive as those of the
+ propagandists. The muzhik turned a deaf ear to their instigations, and the
+ police soon prevented their further activity. Thus the would-be
+ root-and-branch reforms found themselves in a dilemma. Either they must
+ abandon their schemes for the moment or they must strike immediately at
+ their persecutors. They chose, as we have seen, the latter alternative,
+ and after vain attempts to frighten the Government by acts of terrorism
+ against zealous officials, they assassinated the Tsar himself; but before
+ they had time to think of the constructive part of their task, their
+ organisation was destroyed by the Autocratic Power and the bureaucracy,
+ and those of them who escaped arrest had to seek safety in emigration to
+ Switzerland and Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then arose, all along the line of the defeated, decimated revolutionists,
+ the cry, "What is to be done?" Some replied that the shattered
+ organisation should be reconstructed, and a number of secret agents were
+ sent successively from Switzerland for this purpose. But their efforts, as
+ they themselves confessed, were fruitless, and despondency seemed to be
+ settling down permanently on all, except a few fanatics, when a voice was
+ heard calling on the fugitives to rally round a new banner and carry on
+ the struggle by entirely new methods. The voice came from a
+ revolutionologist (if I may use such a term) of remarkable talent, called
+ M. Plekhanof, who had settled in Geneva with a little circle of friends,
+ calling themselves the "Labour Emancipation Group." His views were
+ expounded in a series of interesting publications, the first of which was
+ a brochure entitled "Socialism and the Political Struggle," published in
+ 1883.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to M. Plekhanof and his group the revolutionary movement had
+ been conducted up to that moment on altogether wrong lines. All previous
+ revolutionary groups had acted on the assumption that the political
+ revolution and the economic reorganisation of society must be effected
+ simultaneously, and consequently they had rejected contemptuously all
+ proposals for reforms, however radical, of a merely political kind. These
+ had been considered, as I have mentioned in a previous chapter, not only
+ as worthless, but as positively prejudicial to the interests of the
+ working classes, because so-called political liberties and parliamentary
+ government would be sure to consolidate the domination of the bourgeoisie.
+ That such has generally been the immediate effect of parliamentary
+ institutions is undeniable, but it did not follow that the creation of
+ such institutions should be opposed. On the contrary, they ought to be
+ welcomed, not merely because, as some revolutionists had already pointed
+ out, propaganda and agitation could be more easily carried on under a
+ constitutional regime, but because constitutionalism is certainly the most
+ convenient, and perhaps the only, road by which the socialistic ideal can
+ ultimately be attained. This is a dark saying, but it will become clearer
+ when I have explained, according to the new apostles, a second error into
+ which their predecessors had fallen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That second error was the assumption that all true friends of the people,
+ whether Conservatives, Liberals, or revolutionaries, ought to oppose to
+ the utmost the development of capitalism. In the light of Karl Marx's
+ discoveries in economic science every one must recognise this to be an
+ egregious mistake. That great authority, it was said, had proved that the
+ development of capitalism was irresistible, and his conclusions had been
+ confirmed by the recent history of Russia, for all the economic progress
+ made during the last half century had been on capitalist lines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even if it were possible to arrest the capitalist movement, it is not
+ desirable from the revolutionary point of view. In support of this thesis
+ Karl Marx is again cited. He has shown that capitalism, though an evil in
+ itself, is a necessary stage of economic and social progress. At first it
+ is prejudicial to the interests of the working classes, but in the long
+ run it benefits them, because the ever-growing proletariat must, whether
+ it desires it or not, become a political party, and as a political party
+ it must one day break the domination of the bourgeoisie. As soon as it has
+ obtained the predominant political power, it will confiscate, for the
+ public good, the instruments of production&mdash;factories, foundries,
+ machines, etc.&mdash;by expropriating the capitalist. In this way all the
+ profits which accrue from production on a large scale, and which at
+ present go into the pockets of the capitalists, will be distributed
+ equally among the workmen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus began a new phase of the revolutionary movement, and, like all
+ previous phases, it remained for some years in the academic stage, during
+ which there were endless discussions on theoretical and practical
+ questions. Lavroff, the prophet of the old propaganda, treated the new
+ ideas "with grandfatherly severity," and Tikhomirof, the leading
+ representative of the moribund Narodnaya Volya, which had prepared the
+ acts of terrorism, maintained stoutly that the West European methods
+ recommended by Plekhanof were inapplicable to Russia. The Plekhanof group
+ replied in a long series of publications, partly original and partly
+ translations from Marx and Engels, explaining the doctrines and aims of
+ the Social Democrats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seven years were spent in this academic literary activity&mdash;a period
+ of comparative repose for the Russian secret police&mdash;and about 1890
+ the propagandists of the new school began to work cautiously in St.
+ Petersburg. At first they confined themselves to forming little secret
+ circles for making converts, and they found that the ground had been to
+ some extent prepared for the seed which they had to sow. The workmen were
+ discontented, and some of the more intelligent amongst them who had
+ formerly been in touch with the propagandists of the older generation had
+ learned that there was an ingenious and effective means of getting their
+ grievances redressed. How was that possible? By combination and strikes.
+ For the uneducated workers this was an important discovery, and they soon
+ began to put the suggested remedy to a practical test. In the autumn of
+ 1894 labour troubles broke out in the Nevski engineering works and the
+ arsenal, and in the following year in the Thornton factory and the
+ cigarette works. In all these strikes the Social Democratic agents took
+ part behind the scenes. Avoiding the main errors of the old propagandists,
+ who had offered the workmen merely abstract Socialist theories which no
+ uneducated person could reasonably be expected to understand, they adopted
+ a more rational method. Though impervious to abstract theories, the
+ Russian workman is not at all insensible to the prospect of bettering his
+ material condition and getting his everyday grievances redressed. Of these
+ grievances the ones he felt most keenly were the long hours, the low
+ wages, the fines arbitrarily imposed by the managers, and the brutal
+ severity of the foreman. By helping him to have these grievances removed
+ the Social Democratic agents might gain his confidence, and when they had
+ come to be regarded by him as his real friends they might widen his
+ sympathies and teach him to feel that his personal interests were
+ identical with the interests of the working classes as a whole. In this
+ way it would be possible to awaken in the industrial proletariat generally
+ a sort of esprit de corps, which is the first condition of political
+ organisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On these lines the agents set to work. Having formed themselves into a
+ secret association called the "Union for the Emancipation of the Working
+ Classes," they gradually abandoned the narrow limits of
+ coterie-propaganda, and prepared the way for agitation on a larger scale.
+ Among the discontented workmen they distributed a large number of
+ carefully written tracts, in which the material grievances were
+ formulated, and the whole political system, with its police, gendarmes,
+ Cossacks, and tax-gathers, was criticised in no friendly spirit, but
+ without violent language. In introducing into the programme this political
+ element, great caution had to be exercised, because the workmen did not
+ yet perceive clearly any close connection between their grievances and the
+ existing political institutions, and those of them who belonged to the
+ older generation regarded the Tsar as the incarnation of disinterested
+ benevolence. Bearing this in mind, the Union circulated a pamphlet for the
+ enlightenment of the labouring population, in which the writer refrained
+ from all reference to the Autocratic Power, and described simply the
+ condition of the labouring classes, the heavy burdens they had to bear,
+ the abuses of which they were the victims, and the inconsiderate way in
+ which they were treated by their employers. This pamphlet was eagerly
+ read, and from that moment whenever labour troubles arose the men applied
+ to the Social Democratic agents to assist them in formulating their
+ grievances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, the assistance had to be given secretly, because there were
+ always police spies in the factories, and all persons suspected of aiding
+ the labour movement were liable to be arrested and exiled. In spite of
+ this danger the work was carried on with great energy, and in the summer
+ of 1896 the field of operations was extended. During the coronation
+ ceremonies of that year the factories and workshops in St. Petersburg were
+ closed, and the men considered that for these days they ought to receive
+ wages as usual. When their demand was refused, 40,000 of them went out on
+ strike. The Social Democratic Union seized the opportunity and distributed
+ tracts in large quantities. For the first time such tracts were read aloud
+ at workmen's meetings and applauded by the audience. The Union encouraged
+ the workmen in their resistance, but advised them to refrain from
+ violence, so as not to provoke the intervention of the police and the
+ military, as they had imprudently done on some previous occasions. When
+ the police did intervene and expelled some of the strike-leaders from St.
+ Petersburg, the agitators had an excellent opportunity of explaining that
+ the authorities were the protectors of the employers and the enemies of
+ the working classes. These explanations counteracted the effect of an
+ official proclamation to the workmen, in which M. Witte tried to convince
+ them that the Tsar was constantly striving to improve their condition. The
+ struggle was decided, not by arguments and exhortations, but by a more
+ potent force; having no funds for continuing the strike, the men were
+ compelled by starvation to resume work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the point at which the labour movement began to be conducted on a
+ large scale and by more systematic methods. In the earlier labour troubles
+ the strikers had not understood that the best means of bringing pressure
+ on employers was simply to refuse to work, and they had often proceeded to
+ show their dissatisfaction by ruthlessly destroying their employers'
+ property. This had brought the police, and sometimes the military, on the
+ scene, and numerous arrests had followed. Another mistake made by the
+ inexperienced strikers was that they had neglected to create a reserve
+ fund from which they could draw the means of subsistence when they no
+ longer received wages and could no longer obtain credit at the factory
+ provision store. Efforts were now made to correct these two mistakes, and
+ with regard to the former they were fairly successful, for wanton
+ destruction of property ceased to be a prominent feature of labour
+ troubles; but strong reserve funds have not yet been created, so that the
+ strikes have never been of long duration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though the strikes had led, so far, to no great practical, tangible
+ results, the new ideas and aspirations were spreading rapidly in the
+ factories and workshops, and they had already struck such deep root that
+ some of the genuine workmen wished to have a voice in the managing
+ committee of the Union, which was composed exclusively of educated men.
+ When a request to that effect was rejected by the committee a lengthy
+ discussion took place, and it soon became evident that underneath the
+ question of organisation lay a most important question of principle. The
+ workmen wished to concentrate their efforts on the improvement of their
+ material condition, and to proceed on what we should call trade-unionist
+ lines, whereas the committee wished them to aim also at the acquisition of
+ political rights. Great determination was shown on both sides. An attempt
+ of the workmen to maintain a secret organ of their own with the view of
+ emancipating themselves from the "Politicals" ended in failure; but they
+ received sympathy and support from some of the educated members of the
+ party, and in this way a schism took place in the Social Democrat camp.
+ After repeated ineffectual attempts to find a satisfactory compromise, the
+ question was submitted to a Congress which was held in Switzerland in
+ 1900; but the discussions merely accentuated the differences of opinion,
+ and the two parties constituted themselves into separate independent
+ groups. The one under the leadership of Plekhanof, and calling itself the
+ Revolutionary Social Democrats, held to the Marx doctrines in all their
+ extent and purity, and maintained the necessity of constant agitation in
+ the political sense. The other, calling itself the Union of Foreign Social
+ Democrats, inclined to the trade-unionism programme, and proclaimed the
+ necessity of being guided by political expediency rather than inflexible
+ dogmas. Between the two a wordy warfare was carried on for some time in
+ pedantic, technical language; but though habitually brandishing their
+ weapons and denouncing their antagonists in true Homeric style, they were
+ really allies, struggling towards a common end&mdash;two sections of the
+ Social Democratic party differing from each other on questions of tactics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two divergent tendencies have often reappeared in the subsequent
+ history of the movement. During ordinary peaceful times the economic or
+ trade-unionist tendency can generally hold its own, but as soon as
+ disturbances occur and the authorities have to intervene, the political
+ current quickly gains the upper hand. This was exemplified in the labour
+ troubles which took place at Rostoff-on-the-Don in 1902. During the first
+ two days of the strike the economic demands alone were put forward, and in
+ the speeches which were delivered at the meetings of workmen no reference
+ was made to political grievances. On the third day one orator ventured to
+ speak disrespectfully of the Autocratic Power, but he thereby provoked
+ signs of dissatisfaction in the audiences. On the fifth and following
+ days, however, several political speeches were made, ending with the cry
+ of "Down with Tsarism!" and a crowd of 30,000 workmen agreed with the
+ speakers. Thereafter occurred similar strikes in Odessa, the Caucasus,
+ Kief, and Central Russia, and they had all a political rather than a
+ purely economic character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I must now endeavour to explain clearly the point of view and plan of
+ campaign of this new movement, which I may call the revolutionary
+ Renaissance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ultimate aim of the new reformers was the same as that of all their
+ predecessors&mdash;the thorough reorganisation of Society on Socialistic
+ principles. According to their doctrines, Society as at present
+ constituted consists of two great classes, called variously the exploiters
+ and the exploited, the shearers and the shorn, the capitalists and the
+ workers, the employers and the employed, the tyrants and the oppressed;
+ and this unsatisfactory state of things must go on so long as the
+ so-called bourgeois or capitalist regime continues to exist. In the new
+ heaven and the new earth of which the Socialist dreams this unjust
+ distinction is to disappear; all human beings are to be equally free and
+ independent, all are to cooperate spontaneously with brains and hands to
+ the common good, and all are to enjoy in equal shares the natural and
+ artificial good things of this life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So far there has never been any difference of opinion among the various
+ groups of Russian thorough-going revolutionists. All of them, from the
+ antiquated Nihilist down to the Social Democrat of the latest type, have
+ held these views. What has differentiated them from each other is the
+ greater or less degree of impatience to realise the ideal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most impatient were the Anarchists, who grouped themselves around
+ Bakunin. They wished to overthrow immediately by a frontal attack all
+ existing forms of government and social organisation, in the hope that
+ chance, or evolution, or natural instinct, or sudden inspiration or some
+ other mysterious force, would create something better. They themselves
+ declined to aid this mysterious force even by suggestions, on the ground
+ that, as one of them has said, "to construct is not the business of the
+ generation whose duty is to destroy." Notwithstanding the strong impulsive
+ element in the national character, the reckless, ultra-impatient
+ doctrinaires never became numerous, and never succeeded in forming an
+ organised group, probably because the young generation in Russia were too
+ much occupied with the actual and future condition of their own country to
+ embark on schemes of cosmopolitan anarchism such as Bakunin recommended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next in the scale of impatience came the group of believers in Socialist
+ agitation among the masses, with a view to overturning the existing
+ Government and putting themselves in its place as soon as the masses were
+ sufficiently organised to play the part destined for them. Between them
+ and the Anarchists the essential points of difference were that they
+ admitted the necessity of some years of preparation, and they intended,
+ when the Government was overturned, not to preserve indefinitely the state
+ of anarchy, but to put in the place of autocracy, limited monarchy, or the
+ republic, a strong, despotic Government thoroughly imbued with Socialistic
+ principles. As soon as it had laid firmly the foundations of the new order
+ of things it was to call a National Assembly, from which it was to
+ receive, I presume, a bill of indemnity for the benevolent tyranny which
+ it had temporarily exercised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Impatience a few degrees less intense produced the next group, the
+ partisans of pacific Socialist propaganda. They maintained that there was
+ no necessity for overthrowing the old order of things till the masses had
+ been intellectually prepared for the new, and they objected to the
+ foundation of the new regime being laid by despots, however
+ well-intentioned in the Socialist sense. The people must be made happy and
+ preserved in a state of happiness by the people themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the last place came the least impatient of all, the Social Democrats,
+ who differ widely from all the preceding categories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All previous revolutionary groups had systematically rejected the idea of
+ a gradual transition from the bourgeois to the Socialist regime. They
+ would not listen to any suggestion about a constitutional monarchy or a
+ democratic republic even as a mere intermediate stage of social
+ development. All such things, as part and parcel of the bourgeois system,
+ were anathematised. There must be no half-way houses between present
+ misery and future happiness; for many weary travellers might be tempted to
+ settle there in the desert, and fail to reach the promised land. "Ever
+ onward" should be the watchword, and no time should be wasted on the
+ foolish struggles of political parties and the empty vanities of political
+ life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not thus thought the Social Democrat. He was much wiser in his generation.
+ Having seen how the attempts of the impatient groups had ended in
+ disaster, and knowing that, if they had succeeded, the old effete
+ despotism would probably have been replaced by a young, vigorous one more
+ objectionable than its predecessor, he determined to try a more circuitous
+ but surer road to the goal which the impatient people had in view. In his
+ opinion the distance from the present Russian regime protected by
+ autocracy to the future Socialist paradise was far too great to be
+ traversed in a single stage, and he knew of one or two comfortable
+ rest-houses on the way. First there was the rest-house of
+ Constitutionalism, with parliamentary institutions. For some years the
+ bourgeoisie would doubtless have a parliamentary majority, but gradually,
+ by persistent effort, the Fourth Estate would gain the upper hand, and
+ then the Socialist millennium might be proclaimed. Meanwhile, what had to
+ be done was to gain the confidence of the masses, especially of the
+ factory workers, who were more intelligent and less conservative than the
+ peasantry, and to create powerful labour organisations as material for a
+ future political party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This programme implied, of course, a certain unity of action with the
+ constitutionalists, from whom, as I have said, the revolutionists of the
+ old school had stood sternly aloof. There was now no question of a formal
+ union, and certainly no idea of a "union of hearts," because the
+ Socialists knew that their ultimate aim would be strenuously opposed by
+ the Liberals, and the Liberals knew that an attempt was being made to use
+ them as a cat's-paw; but there seemed to be no reason why they of the two
+ groups should not observe towards each other a benevolent neutrality, and
+ march side by side as far as the half-way house, where they could consider
+ the conditions of the further advance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I first became acquainted with the Russian Social Democrats I
+ imagined that their plan of campaign was of a purely pacific character;
+ and that they were, unlike their predecessors, an evolutionary, as
+ distinguished from a revolutionary, party. Subsequently I discovered that
+ this conception was not quite accurate. In ordinary quiet times they use
+ merely pacific methods, and they feel that the Proletariat is not yet
+ sufficiently prepared, intellectually and politically, to assume the great
+ responsibilities which are reserved for it in the future. Moreover, when
+ the moment comes for getting rid of the Autocratic Power, they would
+ prefer a gradual process of liquidation to a sudden cataclysm. So far they
+ may be said to be evolutionaries rather than revolutionaries, but their
+ plan of campaign does not entirely exclude violence. They would not
+ consider it their duty to oppose the use of violence on the part of the
+ more impatient sections of the revolutionists, and they would have no
+ scruples about utilising disturbances for the attainment of their own end.
+ Public agitation, which is always likely in Russia to provoke violent
+ repression by the authorities, they regard as necessary for keeping alive
+ and strengthening the spirit of opposition; and when force is used by the
+ police they approve of the agitators using force in return. To acts of
+ terrorism, however, they are opposed on principle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who, then, are the Terrorists, who have assassinated so many great
+ personages, including the Grand Duke Serge? In reply to this question I
+ must introduce the reader to another group of the revolutionists who have
+ usually been in hostile, rather than friendly, relations with the Social
+ Democrats, and who call themselves the Socialist-Revolutionaries
+ (Sotsialisty-Revolutsionery).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be remembered that the terrorist group, commonly called Narodnaya
+ Volya, or Narodovoltsi, which succeeded in assassinating Alexander II.,
+ were very soon broken up by the police and most of the leading members
+ were arrested. A few escaped, of whom some remained in the country and
+ others emigrated to Switzerland or Paris, and efforts at reorganisation
+ were made, especially in the southern and western provinces, but they
+ proved ineffectual. At last, sobered by experience and despairing of
+ further success, some of the prisoners and a few of the exiles&mdash;notably
+ Tikhomirof, who was regarded as the leader&mdash;made their peace with the
+ Government, and for some years terrorism seemed to be a thing of the past.
+ Passing through Russia on my way home from India and Central Asia at that
+ time, I came to the conclusion that the young generation had recovered
+ from its prolonged attack of brain-fever, and had entered on a more
+ normal, tranquil, and healthy period of existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My expectations proved too optimistic. About 1894 the Narodnaya Volya came
+ to life again, with all its terrorist traditions intact; and shortly
+ afterwards appeared the new group which I have just mentioned, the
+ Socialist-Revolutionaries, with somewhat similar principles and a better
+ organisation. For some seven or eight years the two groups existed side by
+ side, and then the Narodnaya Volya disappeared, absorbed probably by its
+ more powerful rival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the first years of their existence neither group was strong enough
+ to cause the Government serious inconvenience, and it was not till 1897-98
+ that they found means of issuing manifestos and programmes. In these the
+ Narodovoltsi declared that their immediate aims were the annihilation of
+ Autocracy, the convocation of a National Assembly and the reorganisation
+ of the Empire on the principles of federation and local self-government,
+ and that for the attainment of these objects the means to be employed
+ should include popular insurrections, military conspiracies, bombs and
+ dynamite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very similar, though ostensibly a little more eclectic, was the programme
+ of the Socialist-Revolutionaries. Their ultimate aim was declared to be
+ the transfer of political authority from the Autocratic Power to the
+ people, the abolition of private property in the means of production, and
+ in general the reorganisation of national life on Socialist principles. On
+ certain points they were at one with the Social Democrats. They
+ recognised, for example, that the social reorganisation must be preceded
+ by a political revolution, that much preparatory work was necessary, and
+ that attention should be directed first to the industrial proletariat as
+ the most intelligent section of the masses. On the other hand they
+ maintained that it was a mistake to confine the revolutionary activity to
+ the working classes of the towns, who were not strong enough to overturn
+ the Autocratic Power. The agitation ought, therefore, to be extended to
+ the peasantry, who were quite "developed" enough to understand at least
+ the idea of land-nationalisation; and for the carrying out of this part of
+ the programme a special organisation was created.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With so many opinions in common, it seemed at one moment as if the Social
+ Democrats and the Socialist-Revolutionaries might unite their forces for a
+ combined attack on the Government; but apart from the mutual jealousy and
+ hatred which so often characterise revolutionary as well as religious
+ sects, they were prevented from coalescing, or even cordially
+ co-operating, by profound differences both in doctrine and in method.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Social Democrats are essentially doctrinaires. Thorough-going
+ disciples of Karl Marx, they believed in what they consider the immutable
+ laws of social progress, according to which the Socialistic ideal can be
+ reached only through capitalism; and the intermediate political
+ revolution, which is to substitute the will of the people for the
+ Autocratic Power, must be effected by the conversion and organisation of
+ the industrial proletariat. With the spiritual pride of men who feel
+ themselves to be the incarnations or avatars of immutable law, they are
+ inclined to look down with something very like contempt on mere empirics
+ who are ignorant of scientific principles and are guided by considerations
+ of practical expediency. The Social-Revolutionaries seem to them to be
+ empirics of this kind because they reject the tenets, or at least deny the
+ infallibility, of the Marx school, cling to the idea of partially
+ resisting the overwhelming influence of capitalism in Russia, hope that
+ the peasantry will play at least a secondary part in bringing about the
+ political revolution, and are profoundly convinced that the advent of
+ political liberty may be greatly accelerated by the use of terrorism. On
+ this last point they stated their views very frankly in a pamphlet which
+ they published in 1902 under the title of "Our Task" (Nasha Zadatcha). It
+ is there said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One of the powerful means of struggle, dictated by our revolutionary past
+ and present, is political terrorism, consisting of the annihilation of the
+ most injurious and influential personages of Russian autocracy in given
+ conditions. Systematic terrorism, in conjunction with other forms of open
+ mass-struggle (industrial riots and agrarian risings, demonstrations,
+ etc.), which receive from terrorism an enormous, decisive significance,
+ will lead to the disorganisation of the enemy. Terrorist activity will
+ cease only with the victory over autocracy and the complete attainment of
+ political liberty. Besides its chief significance as a means of
+ disorganising, terrorist activity will serve at the same time as a means
+ of propaganda and agitation, a form of open struggle taking place before
+ the eyes of the whole people, undermining the prestige of Government
+ authority, and calling into life new revolutionary forces, while the oral
+ and literary propaganda is being continued without interruption. Lastly,
+ the terrorist activity serves for the whole secret revolutionary party as
+ a means of self-defence and of protecting the organisation against the
+ injurious elements of spies and treachery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In accordance with this theory a "militant organisation" (Boevaga
+ Organisatsia) was formed and soon set to work with revolvers and bombs.
+ First an attempt was made on the life of Pobedonostsef; then the Minister
+ of the Interior, Sipiagin, was assassinated; next attempts were made on
+ the lives of the Governors of Vilna and Kharkof, and the Kharkof chief of
+ police; and since that time the Governor of Ufa, the Vice-Governor of
+ Elizabetpol, the Minister of the Interior, M. Plehve, and the Grand Duke
+ Serge have fallen victims to the terrorist policy.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * In this list I have not mentioned the assassination of M.
+ Bogolyepof, Minister of Public Instruction, in 1901, because
+ I do not know whether it should be attributed to the
+ Socialist-Revolutionaries or to the Narodovoltsi, who had
+ not yet amalgamated with them.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Though the Social Democrats have no sentimental squeamishness about
+ bloodshed, they objected to this policy on the ground that acts of
+ terrorism were unnecessary and were apt to prove injurious rather than
+ beneficial to the revolutionist cause. One of the main objects of every
+ intelligent revolutionary party should be to awaken all classes from their
+ habitual apathy and induce them to take an active part in the political
+ movement; but terrorism must have a contrary effect by suggesting that
+ political freedom is to be attained, not by the steady pressure and
+ persevering cooperation of the people, but by startling, sensational acts
+ of individual heroism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The efforts of these two revolutionary parties, as well as of minor
+ groups, to get hold of the industrial proletariat did not escape the
+ notice of the authorities; and during the labour troubles of 1896, on the
+ suggestion of M. Witte, the Government had considered the question as to
+ what should be done to counteract the influence of the agitators. On that
+ question it had no difficulty in coming to a decision; the condition of
+ the working classes must be improved. An expert official was accordingly
+ instructed to write a report on what had already been done in that
+ direction. In his report it was shown that the Government had long been
+ thinking about the subject. Not to speak of a still-born law about a
+ ten-hour day for artisans, dating from the time of Catherine II., an
+ Imperial commission had been appointed as early as 1859, but nothing
+ practical came of its deliberations until 1882, when legislative measures
+ were taken for the protection of women and children in factories. A little
+ later (1886) other grievances were dealt with and partly removed by
+ regulating contracts of hire, providing that the money derived from
+ deductions and fines should not be appropriated by the employers, and
+ creating a staff of factory inspectors who should take care that the
+ benevolent intentions of the Government were duly carried out. Having
+ reviewed all these official efforts in 1896, the Government passed in the
+ following year a law prohibiting night work and limiting the working day
+ to eleven and a half hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This did not satisfy the workmen. Their wages were still low, and it was
+ difficult to get them increased because strikes and all forms of
+ association were still, as they had always been, criminal offences. On
+ this point the Government remained firm so far as the law was concerned,
+ but it gradually made practical concessions by allowing the workmen to
+ combine for certain purposes. In 1898, for example, in Kharkof, the
+ Engineers' Mutual Aid Society was sanctioned, and gradually it became
+ customary to allow the workmen to elect delegates for the discussion of
+ their grievances with the employers and inspectors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding that these concessions did not check the growing influence of the
+ Social Democratic agitators among the operatives, the Government resolved
+ to go a step further; it would organise the workers on purely
+ trade-unionist lines, and would thereby combat the Social Democrats, who
+ always advised the strikers to mix up political demands with their
+ material grievances. The project seemed to have a good prospect of
+ success, because there were many workmen, especially of the older
+ generation, who did not at all like the mixing up of politics, which so
+ often led to arrest, imprisonment and exile, with the practical concerns
+ of every day life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first attempt of the kind was made in Moscow under the direction of a
+ certain Zubatof, chief of the secret police, who had been himself a
+ revolutionary in his youth, and afterwards an agent provocateur. Aided by
+ Tikhomirof, the repentant terrorist whom I have already mentioned, Zubatof
+ organised a large workmen's association, with reading-rooms, lectures,
+ discussions and other attractions, and sought to convince the members that
+ they should turn a deaf ear to the Social Democratic agents, and look only
+ to the Government for the improvement of their condition. In order to gain
+ their sympathy and confidence, he instructed his subordinates to take the
+ side of the workmen in all labour disputes, while he himself brought
+ official pressure to bear on the employers. By this means he made a
+ considerable number of converts, and for a time the association seemed to
+ prosper, but he did not possess the extraordinary ability and tact
+ required to play the complicated game successfully, and he committed the
+ fatal mistake of using the office-bearers of the association as detectives
+ for the discovery of the "evil-intentioned." This tactical error had its
+ natural consequences. As soon as the workmen perceived that their
+ professed benefactors were police spies, who did not obtain for them any
+ real improvement of their condition, the popularity of the association
+ rapidly declined. At the same time, the factory owners complained to the
+ Minister of Finance that the police, who ought to be guardians of public
+ order, and who had accused the factory inspectors of stirring up
+ discontent in the labouring population, were themselves creating troubles
+ by inciting the workmen to make inordinate demands. The Minister of
+ Finance at the moment was M. Witte, and the Minister of Interior,
+ responsible for the acts of the police, was M. Plehve, and between these
+ two official dignitaries, who were already in very strained relations,
+ Zubatof's activity formed a new base of contention. In these circumstances
+ it is not surprising that the very risky experiment came to an untimely
+ end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In St. Petersburg a similar experiment was made, and it ended much more
+ tragically. There the chief rôle was played by a mysterious personage
+ called Father Gapon, who acquired great momentary notoriety. Though a
+ genuine priest, he did not belong by birth, as most Russian priests do, to
+ the ecclesiastical caste. The son of a peasant in Little Russia, where the
+ ranks of the clergy are not hermetically sealed against the other social
+ classes, he aspired to take orders, and after being rusticated from a
+ seminary for supposed sympathy with revolutionary ideas, he contrived to
+ finish his studies and obtain ordination. During a residence in Moscow he
+ took part in the Zubatof experiment, and when that badly conducted scheme
+ collapsed he was transferred to St. Petersburg and appointed chaplain to a
+ large convict prison. His new professional duties did not prevent him from
+ continuing to take a keen interest in the welfare of the working classes,
+ and in the summer of 1904 he became, with the approval of the police
+ authorities, president of a large labour union called the Society of
+ Russian Workmen, which had eleven sections in the various industrial
+ suburbs of the capital. Under his guidance the experiment proceeded for
+ some months very successfully. He gained the sympathy and confidence of
+ the workmen, and so long as no serious questions arose he kept his hold on
+ them; but a storm was brewing and he proved unequal to the occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first days of 1905, when the economic consequences of the war had
+ come to be keenly felt, a spirit of discontent appeared among the
+ labouring population of St. Petersburg, and on Sunday, January 15th&mdash;exactly
+ a week before the famous Sunday when the troops were called into play&mdash;a
+ strike began in the Putilof ironworks and spread like wildfire to the
+ other big works in the neighbourhood. The immediate cause of the
+ disturbance was the dismissal of some workmen and a demand on the part of
+ the labour union that they should be reinstated. A deputation, composed
+ partly of genuine workmen and partly of Social Democratic agitators, and
+ led by Gapon, negotiated with the managers of the Putilof works, and
+ failed to effect an arrangement. At this moment Gapon tried hard to
+ confine the negotiations to the points in dispute, whereas the agitators
+ put forward demands of a wider kind, such as the eight-hour working day,
+ and they gradually obtained his concurrence on condition that no political
+ demands should be introduced into the programme. In defending this
+ condition he was supported by the workmen, so that when agitators tried to
+ make political speeches at the meetings they were unceremoniously
+ expelled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A similar struggle between the "Economists" and the "Politicals" was going
+ on in the other industrial suburbs, notably in the Nevski quarter, where
+ 45,000 operatives had struck work, and the Social Democrats were
+ particularly active. In this section of the Labour Union the most
+ influential member was a young workman called Petroff, who was a staunch
+ Gaponist in the sense that he wished the workers to confine themselves to
+ their own grievances and to resist the introduction of political demands.
+ At first he succeeded in preventing the agitators from speaking at the
+ meetings, but they soon proved too much for him. At one of the meetings on
+ Tuesday, when he happened to be absent, a Social Democrat contrived to get
+ himself elected chairman, and from that moment the political agitators had
+ a free hand. They had a regular organisation composed of an organiser,
+ three "oratorical agitators," and several assistant-organisers who
+ attended the small meetings in the operatives' sleeping-quarters. Besides
+ these there were a certain number of workmen already converted to Social
+ Democratic principles who had learned the art of making political
+ speeches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reports of the agitators to the central organisation, written
+ hurriedly during this eventful week, are extremely graphic and
+ interesting. They declared that there is a frightful amount of work to be
+ done and very few to do it. Their stock of Social Democratic pamphlets is
+ exhausted and they are hoarse from speech-making. In spite of their
+ superhuman efforts the masses remain frightfully "undeveloped." The men
+ willingly collect to hear the orators, listen to them attentively, express
+ approval or dissent, and even put questions; but with all this they remain
+ obstinately on the ground of their own immediate wants, such as the
+ increase of wages and protection against brutal foremen, and they only
+ hint vaguely at more serious demands. The agitators, however, are equally
+ obstinate, and they make a few converts. To illustrate how conversions are
+ made, the following incident is related. At one meeting the cry of "Stop
+ the war!" is raised by an orator without sufficient preparation, and at
+ once a voice is heard in the audience saying. "No, no! The little Japs
+ (Yaposhki) must be beaten!" Thereupon a more experienced orator comes
+ forward and a characteristic conversation takes place:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have we much land of our own, my friends?" asks the orator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Much!" replies the crowd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do we require Manchuria?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who pays for the war?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We do!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are our brothers dying, and do your wives and children remain without a
+ bit of bread?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So it is!" say many, with a significant shake of the head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having succeeded so far, the orator tries to turn the popular indignation
+ against the Tsar by explaining that he is to blame for all this misery and
+ suffering, but Petroff suddenly appears on the scene and maintains that
+ for the misery and suffering the Tsar is not at all to blame, for he knows
+ nothing about it. It is all the fault of his servants, the tchinovniks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this device Petroff suppresses the seditious cry of "Down with
+ autocracy!" which the Social Democrats were anxious to make the watchword
+ of the movement, but he has thereby been drawn from his strong position of
+ "No politics," and he is standing, as we shall see presently, on a
+ slippery incline.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Thursday and Friday the activity of the leaders and the excitement of
+ the masses increase. While the Gaponists speak merely of local grievances
+ and material wants, the Social Democrats incite their hearers to a
+ political struggle, advising them to demand a Constituent Assembly, and
+ explaining the necessity for all workmen to draw together and form a
+ powerful political party. The haranguing goes on from morning to night,
+ and agitators drive about from one factory to another to keep the
+ excitement at fever-heat. The police, usually so active on such occasions,
+ do not put in an appearance. Prince Sviatopolk Mirski, the honest,
+ well-intentioned, liberal Minister of the Interior, cannot make up his
+ mind to act with energy, and lets things drift. The agitators themselves
+ are astonished at this extraordinary inactivity. One of them, writing a
+ few days afterwards, says: "The police was paralysed. It would have been
+ easy to arrest Gapon, and discover the orators. On Friday the clubs might
+ have been surrounded and the orators arrested. . . . In a word, decided
+ measures might have been taken, but they were not."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not only Petroff that has abandoned his strong position of "No
+ politics"; Gapon is doing likewise. The movement has spread far beyond
+ what he expected, and he is being carried away by the prevailing
+ excitement. With all his benevolent intentions, he is of a nervous,
+ excitable nature, and his besetting sin is vanity. He perceives that by
+ resisting the Social Democrats he is losing his hold on the masses. Early
+ in the week, as we have seen, he began to widen his programme in the
+ Social Democratic sense, and every day he makes new concessions. Before
+ the week is finished a Social Democratic orator can write triumphantly:
+ "In three days we have transformed the Gaponist assemblies into political
+ meetings!" Like Petroff, Gapon seeks to defend the Tsar, and he falls into
+ Petroff's strategical mistake of pretending that the Tsar knows nothing of
+ the sufferings of his people. From that admission to the resolution that
+ the Tsar must somehow be informed personally and directly, by some means
+ outside of the regular official channel, there is but one step, and that
+ step is quickly taken. On Friday morning Gapon has determined to present
+ with his own hands a petition to his Majesty, and the petition is already
+ drafted, containing demands which go far beyond workmen's grievances.
+ After resisting the Social Democratic agitators so stoutly, he is now
+ going over, bag and baggage, to the Social Democratic camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This wonderful change was consummated on Friday evening at a conference
+ which he held with some delegates of the Social Democrats. From an account
+ written by one of these delegates immediately after the meeting we get an
+ insight into the worthy priest's character and motives. In the morning he
+ had written to them: "I have 100,000 workmen, and I am going with them to
+ the Palace to present a petition. If it is not granted, we shall make a
+ revolution. Do you agree?" They did not like the idea, because the Social
+ Democratic policy is to extort concessions, not to ask favours, and to
+ refrain from anything that might increase the prestige of the Autocratic
+ Power. In their reply, therefore, they consented simply to discuss the
+ matter. I proceed now to quote from the delegate's account of what took
+ place at the conference:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The company consisted of Gapon, with two adherents, and five Social
+ Democrats. All sat round a table, and the conversation began. Gapon is a
+ good-looking man, with dark complexion and thoughtful, sympathetic face.
+ He is evidently very tired, and, like the other orators, he is hoarse. To
+ the questions addressed to him, he replies: 'The masses are at present so
+ electrified that you may lead them wherever you like. We shall go on
+ Sunday to the Palace, and present a petition. If we are allowed to pass
+ without hindrance, we shall march to the Palace Square, and summon the
+ Tsar from Tsarskoe Selo. We shall wait for him till the evening. When he
+ arrives, I shall go to him with a deputation, and in presenting to him the
+ petition, I shall say: 'Your Majesty! Things cannot go on like this; it is
+ time to give the people liberty.' (Tak nelzya! Para dat' narodu svobodu.)
+ If he consents, we shall insist that he take an oath before the people.
+ Only then we shall come away, and when we begin to work, it will only be
+ for eight hours a day. If, on the other hand, we are prevented from
+ entering the city, we shall request and beg, and if they do not let us
+ pass, we shall force our way. In the Palace Square we shall find troops,
+ and we shall entreat them to come over to our side. If they beat us, we
+ shall strike back. There will be sacrifices, but part of the troops will
+ come over to us, and then, being ourselves strong in numbers, we shall
+ make a revolution. We shall construct barricades, pillage the armourers'
+ shops, break open the prisons, and seize the telephones and telegraphs.
+ The Socialist-Revolutionaries have promised us bombs, and the Democrats
+ money: and we shall be victorious!*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This confirms the information which comes to me from other
+ quarters that Gapon was already in friendly relations with
+ other revolutionary groups.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Such, in a few words, were the ideas which Gapon expounded. The
+ impression he made on us was that he did not clearly realise where he was
+ going. Acting with sincerity, he was ready to die, but he was convinced
+ that the troops would not fire, and that the deputation would be received
+ by the Emperor. He did not distinguish between different methods. Though
+ not at all a partisan of violent means, he had become infuriated against
+ autocracy and the Tsar, as was shown by his language when he said: 'If
+ that blockhead of a Tsar comes out' (Yesli etot durak Tsar vuidet) . . .
+ Burning with the desire to attain his object, he looked on revolution like
+ a child, as if it could be accomplished in a day with empty hands!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Knowing that no previous preparations had been made for a revolution such
+ as Gapon talked of, the Social Democratic agents tried to dissuade him
+ from carrying out his idea on Sunday, but he stood firm. He had already
+ committed himself publicly to the project. At a workmen's meeting in
+ another quarter (Vassiliostrof) earlier in the day he had explained the
+ petition, and said: "Let us go to the Winter Palace and summon the
+ Emperor, and let us tell him our wants; if he does not listen to us we do
+ not require him any longer." To a Social Democrat who shook him warmly by
+ the hand and expressed his astonishment that there should be such a man
+ among the clergy, he replied: "I am no longer a priest; I am a fighter for
+ liberty! They want to exile me, and for some nights I have not slept at
+ home." When offered assistance to escape arrest, he answered laconically:
+ "Thanks; I have already a place of refuge." After his departure from the
+ meeting one of his friends, to whom he had confided a copy of the
+ petition, rose and said: "Now has arrived the great historical moment! Now
+ we can and must demand rights and liberty!" After hearing the petition
+ read the meeting decided that if the Tsar did not come out at the demand
+ of the people strong measures should be taken, and one orator indicated
+ pretty plainly what they should be: "We don't require a Tsar who is deaf
+ to the woes of the people; we shall perish ourselves, but we shall kill
+ him. Swear that you will all come to the Palace on Sunday at twelve
+ o'clock!" The audience raised their hands in token of assent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding it impossible to dissuade Gapon from his purpose, the Social
+ Democrats told him that they would take advantage of the circumstances
+ independently, and that if he was allowed to enter the city with his
+ deputation they would organise monster meetings in the Palace Square.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The imperious tone used by Gapon at the public meetings and private
+ consultations was adopted by him also in his letters to the Minister of
+ the Interior and to the Emperor. To the former he wrote:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The workmen and inhabitants of St. Petersburg of various classes desire
+ to see the Tsar at two o'clock on Sunday in the Winter Palace Square, in
+ order to lay before him personally their needs and those of the whole
+ Russian people. . . . Tell the Tsar that I and the workmen, many thousands
+ in number, have peacefully, with confidence in him, but irrevocably,
+ resolved to proceed to the Winter Palace. Let him show his confidence by
+ deeds, and not by manifestos."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the Tsar himself his language was not more respectful:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sovereign,&mdash;I fear the Ministers have not told you the truth about
+ the situation. The whole people, trusting in you, has resolved to appear
+ at the Winter Palace at two o'clock in the afternoon, in order to inform
+ you of its needs. If you hesitate, and do not appear before the people,
+ then you tear the moral bonds between you and them. Trust in you will
+ disappear, because innocent blood will flow. Appear to-morrow before your
+ people and receive our address of devotion in a courageous spirit! I and
+ the labour representatives, my brave comrades, guarantee the inviolability
+ of your person."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gapon was no longer merely the president of the Workmen's Union:
+ inebriated with the excitement he had done so much to create, he now
+ imagined himself the representative of the oppressed Russian people, and
+ the heroic leader of a great political revolution. In the petition which
+ he had prepared he said little about the grievances of the St. Petersburg
+ workmen whose interests he had a right to advocate, and preferred to soar
+ into much higher regions:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The bureaucracy has brought the country to the verge of ruin, and, by a
+ shameful war, is bringing it to its downfall. We have no voice in the
+ heavy burdens imposed on us; we do not even know for whom or why this
+ money is wrung from the impoverished people, and we do not know how it is
+ expended. This state of things is contrary to the Divine laws, and renders
+ life unbearable. Assembled before your palace, we plead for our salvation.
+ Refuse not your aid; raise your people from the tomb, and give them the
+ means of working out their own destiny. Rescue them from the intolerable
+ yoke of officialdom; throw down the wall that separates you from them, in
+ order that they may rule with you the country that was created for their
+ happiness&mdash;a happiness which is being wrenched from us, leaving
+ nothing but sorrow and humiliation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With an innate sentiment of autocratic dignity the Emperor declined to
+ obey the imperious summons, and he thereby avoided an unseemly altercation
+ with the excited priest, as well as the boisterous public meetings which
+ the Social Democrats were preparing to hold in the Palace Square. Orders
+ were given to the police and the troops to prevent the crowds of workmen
+ from penetrating into the centre of the city from the industrial suburbs.
+ The rest need not be described in detail. On Sunday the crowds tried to
+ force their way, the troops fired, and many of the demonstrators were
+ killed or wounded. How many it is impossible to say; between the various
+ estimates there is an enormous discrepancy. At one of the first volleys
+ Father Gapon fell, but he turned out to be quite unhurt, and was spirited
+ away to his place of refuge, whence he escaped across the frontier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as he had an opportunity of giving public expression to his
+ feelings, he indulged in very strong language. In his letters and
+ proclamations the Tsar is called a miscreant and an assassin, and is
+ described as traitorous, bloodthirsty, and bestial. To the ministers he is
+ equally uncomplimentary. They appear to him an accursed band of brigands,
+ Mamelukes, jackals, monsters. Against the Tsar, "with his reptilian
+ brood," and the ministers alike, he vows vengeance&mdash;"death to them
+ all!" As for the means for realising his sacred mission, he recommends
+ bombs, dynamite, individual and wholesale terrorism, popular insurrection,
+ and paralysing the life of the cities by destroying the water-mains, the
+ gas-pipes, the telegraph and telephone wires, the railways and tram-ways,
+ the Government buildings and the prisons. At some moments he seems to
+ imagine himself invested with papal powers, for he anathematises the
+ soldiers who did their duty on the eventful day, whilst he blesses and
+ absolves from their oath of allegiance those who help the nation to win
+ liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So far I have spoken merely of the main currents in the revolutionary
+ movement. Of the minor currents&mdash;particularly those in the outlying
+ provinces, where the Socialist tendencies were mingled with nationalist
+ feeling&mdash;I shall have occasion to speak when I come to deal with the
+ present political situation as a whole. Meanwhile, I wish to sketch in
+ outline the foreign policy which has powerfully contributed to bring about
+ the present crisis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0038" id="link2HCH0038">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ TERRITORIAL EXPANSION AND FOREIGN POLICY
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Rapid Growth of Russia&mdash;Expansive Tendency of Agricultural Peoples&mdash;The
+ Russo-Slavonians&mdash;The Northern Forest and the Steppe&mdash;Colonisation&mdash;The
+ Part of the Government in the Process of Expansion&mdash;Expansion towards
+ the West&mdash;Growth of the Empire Represented in a Tabular Form&mdash;Commercial
+ Motive for Expansion&mdash;The Expansive Force in the Future&mdash;Possibilities
+ of Expansion in Europe&mdash;Persia, Afghanistan, and India&mdash;Trans-Siberian
+ Railway and Weltpolitik&mdash;A Grandiose Scheme&mdash;Determined
+ Opposition of Japan&mdash;Negotiations and War&mdash;Russia's Imprudence
+ Explained&mdash;Conclusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rapid growth of Russia is one of the most remarkable facts of modern
+ history. An insignificant tribe, or collection of tribes, which, a
+ thousand years ago, occupied a small district near the sources of the
+ Dnieper and Western Dvina, has grown into a great nation with a territory
+ stretching from the Baltic to the Northern Pacific, and from the Polar
+ Ocean to the frontiers of Turkey, Persia, Afghanistan, and China. We have
+ here a fact well deserving of investigation, and as the process is still
+ going on and is commonly supposed to threaten our national interests, the
+ investigation ought to have for us more than a mere scientific interest.
+ What is the secret of this expansive power? Is it a mere barbarous lust of
+ territorial aggrandisement, or is it some more reasonable motive? And what
+ is the nature of the process? Is annexation followed by assimilation, or
+ do the new acquisitions retain their old character? Is the Empire in its
+ present extent a homogeneous whole, or merely a conglomeration of
+ heterogenous units held together by the outward bond of centralised
+ administration? If we could find satisfactory answers to these questions,
+ we might determine how far Russia is strengthened or weakened by her
+ annexations of territory, and might form some plausible conjectures as to
+ how, when, and where the process of expansion is to stop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By glancing at her history from the economic point of view we may easily
+ detect one prominent cause of expansion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An agricultural people, employing merely the primitive methods of
+ agriculture, has always a strong tendency to widen its borders. The
+ natural increase of population demands a constantly increasing production
+ of grain, whilst the primitive methods of cultivation exhaust the soil and
+ steadily diminish its productivity. With regard to this stage of economic
+ development, the modest assertion of Malthus, that the supply of food does
+ not increase so rapidly as the population, often falls far short of the
+ truth. As the population increases, the supply of food may decrease not
+ only relatively, but absolutely. When a people finds itself in this
+ critical position, it must adopt one of two alternatives: either it must
+ prevent the increase of population, or it must increase the production of
+ food. In the former case it may legalise the custom of "exposing" infants,
+ as was done in ancient Greece; or it may regularly sell a large portion of
+ the young women and children, as was done until recently in Circassia; or
+ the surplus population may emigrate to foreign lands, as the Scandinavians
+ did in the ninth century, and as we ourselves are doing in a more
+ peaceable fashion at the present day. The other alternative may be
+ effected either by extending the area of cultivation or by improving the
+ system of agriculture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russo-Slavonians, being an agricultural people, experienced this
+ difficulty, but for them it was not serious. A convenient way of escape
+ was plainly indicated by their peculiar geographical position. They were
+ not hemmed in by lofty mountains or stormy seas. To the south and east&mdash;at
+ their very doors, as it were&mdash;lay a boundless expanse of thinly
+ populated virgin soil, awaiting the labour of the husbandman, and ready to
+ repay it most liberally. The peasantry therefore, instead of exposing
+ their infants, selling their daughters, or sweeping the seas as Vikings,
+ simply spread out towards the east and south. This was at once the most
+ natural and the wisest course, for of all the expedients for preserving
+ the equilibrium between population and food-production, increasing the
+ area of cultivation is, under the circumstances just described, the
+ easiest and most effective. Theoretically the same result might have been
+ obtained by improving the method of agriculture, but practically this was
+ impossible. Intensive culture is not likely to be adopted so long as
+ expansion is easy. High farming is a thing to be proud of when there is a
+ scarcity of land, but it would be absurd to attempt it where there is
+ abundance of virgin soil in the vicinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The process of expansion, thus produced by purely economic causes, was
+ accelerated by influences of another kind, especially during the
+ seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The increase in the number of
+ officials, the augmentation of the taxes, the merciless exactions of the
+ Voyevods and their subordinates, the transformation of the peasants and
+ "free wandering people" into serfs, the ecclesiastical reforms and
+ consequent persecution of the schismatics, the frequent conscriptions and
+ violent reforms of Peter the Great&mdash;these and other kinds of
+ oppression made thousands flee from their homes and seek a refuge in the
+ free territory, where there were no officials, no tax-gatherers, and no
+ proprietors. But the State, with its army of tax-gatherers and officials,
+ followed close on the heels of the fugitives, and those who wished to
+ preserve their liberty had to advance still further. Notwithstanding the
+ efforts of the authorities to retain the population in the localities
+ actually occupied, the wave of colonisation moved steadily onwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vast territory which lay open to the colonists consisted of two
+ contiguous regions, separated from each other by no mountains or rivers,
+ but widely differing from each other in many respects. The one, comprising
+ all the northern part of Eastern Europe and of Asia, even unto Kamchatka,
+ may be roughly described as a land of forests, intersected by many rivers,
+ and containing numerous lakes and marshes; the other, stretching
+ southwards to the Black Sea, and eastwards far away into Central Asia, is
+ for the most part what Russians call "the Steppe," and Americans would
+ call the prairies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each of these two regions presented peculiar inducements and peculiar
+ obstacles to colonisation. So far as the facility of raising grain was
+ concerned, the southern region was decidedly preferable. In the north the
+ soil had little natural fertility, and was covered with dense forests, so
+ that much time and labour had to be expended in making a clearing before
+ the seed could be sown.* In the south, on the contrary, the squatter had
+ no trees to fell, and no clearing to make. Nature had cleared the land for
+ him, and supplied him with a rich black soil of marvellous fertility,
+ which has not yet been exhausted by centuries of cultivation. Why, then,
+ did the peasant often prefer the northern forests to the fertile Steppe
+ where the land was already prepared for him?
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The modus operandi has been already described; vide supra,
+ pp. 104 et seq.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ For this apparent inconsistency there was a good and valid reason. The
+ muzhik had not, even in those good old times, any passionate love of
+ labour for its own sake, nor was he by any means insensible to the
+ facilities for agriculture afforded by the Steppe. But he could not regard
+ the subject exclusively from the agricultural point of view. He had to
+ take into consideration the fauna as well as the flora of the two regions.
+ At the head of the fauna in the northern forests stood the peace-loving,
+ laborious Finnish tribes, little disposed to molest settlers who did not
+ make themselves obnoxiously aggressive; on the Steppe lived the predatory,
+ nomadic hordes, ever ready to attack, plunder, and carry off as slaves the
+ peaceful agricultural population. These facts, as well as the agricultural
+ conditions, were known to intending colonists, and influenced them in
+ their choice of a new home. Though generally fearless and fatalistic in a
+ higher degree, they could not entirely overlook the dangers of the Steppe,
+ and many of them preferred to encounter the hard work of the forest
+ region.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These differences in the character and population of the two regions
+ determined the character of the colonisation. Though the colonisation of
+ the northern regions was not effected entirely without bloodshed, it was,
+ on the whole, of a peaceful kind, and consequently received little
+ attention from the contemporary chroniclers. The colonisation of the
+ Steppe, on the contrary, required the help of the Cossacks, and forms, as
+ I have already shown, one of the bloodiest pages of European history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, we see, the process of expansion towards the north, east, and south
+ may be described as a spontaneous movement of the agricultural population.
+ It must, however, be admitted that this is an imperfect and one-sided
+ representation of the phenomenon. Though the initiative unquestionably
+ came from the people, the Government played an important part in the
+ movement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In early times when Russia was merely a conglomeration of independent
+ principalities, the Princes were under the moral and political obligation
+ of protecting their subjects, and this obligation coincided admirably with
+ their natural desire to extend their dominions. When the Grand Princes of
+ Muscovy, in the fifteenth century, united the numerous principalities and
+ proclaimed themselves Tsars, they accepted this obligation for the whole
+ country, and conceived much grander schemes of territorial aggrandisement.
+ Towards the north and northeast no strenuous efforts were required. The
+ Republic of Novgorod easily gained possession of Northern Russia as far as
+ the Ural Mountains, and Siberia was conquered by a small band of Cossacks
+ without the authorisation of Muscovy, so that the Tsars had merely to
+ annex the already conquered territory. In the southern region the part
+ played by the Government was very different. The agricultural population
+ had to be constantly protected along a frontier of enormous length, lying
+ open at all points to the incursions of nomadic tribes. To prevent raids
+ it was necessary to keep up a military cordon, and this means did not
+ always ensure protection to those living near the frontier. The nomads
+ often came in formidable hordes, which could be successfully resisted only
+ by large armies, and sometimes the armies were not large enough to cope
+ with them. Again and again during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries
+ Tartar hordes swept over the country&mdash;burning the villages and towns,
+ and spreading devastation wherever they appeared&mdash;and during more
+ than two centuries Russia had to pay a heavy tribute to the Khans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gradually the Tsars threw off this galling yoke. Ivan the Terrible annexed
+ the three Khanates of the Lower Volga&mdash;Kazan, Kipttchak, and
+ Astrakhan&mdash;and in that way removed the danger of a foreign
+ domination. But permanent protection was not thereby secured to the
+ outlying provinces. The nomadic tribes living near the frontier continued
+ their raids, and in the slave markets of the Crimea the living merchandise
+ was supplied by Russia and Poland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To protect an open frontier against the incursions of nomadic tribes three
+ methods are possible: the construction of a great wall, the establishment
+ of a strong military cordon, and the permanent subjugation of the
+ marauders. The first of these expedients, adopted by the Romans in Britain
+ and by the Chinese on their northwestern frontier, is enormously
+ expensive, and was utterly impossible in a country like Southern Russia,
+ where there is no stone for building purposes; the second was constantly
+ tried, and constantly found wanting; the third alone proved practicable
+ and efficient. Though the Government has long since recognised that the
+ acquisition of barren, thinly populated steppes is a burden rather than an
+ advantage, it has been induced to go on making annexations for the purpose
+ of self-defence, as well as for other reasons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In consequence of this active part which the Government took in the
+ extension of the territory, the process of political expansion sometimes
+ got greatly ahead of the colonisation. After the Turkish wars and
+ consequent annexations in the time of Catherine II., for example, a great
+ part of Southern Russia was almost uninhabited, and the deficiency had to
+ be corrected, as we have seen, by organised emigration. At the present
+ day, in the Asiatic provinces, there are still immense tracts of
+ unoccupied land, some of which are being gradually colonised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we turn now from the East to the West we shall find that the expansion
+ in this direction was of an entirely different kind. The country lying to
+ the westward of the early Russo-Slavonian settlements had a poor soil and
+ a comparatively dense population, and consequently held out little
+ inducement to emigration. Besides this, it was inhabited by warlike
+ agricultural races, who were not only capable of defending their own
+ territory, but even strongly disposed to make encroachments on their
+ eastern neighbours. Russian expansion to the westward was, therefore, not
+ a spontaneous movement of the agricultural population, but the work of the
+ Government, acting slowly and laboriously by means of diplomacy and
+ military force; it had, however, a certain historical justification.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner had Russia freed herself, in the fifteenth century, from the
+ Tartar domination, than her political independence, and even her national
+ existence, were threatened from the West. Her western neighbours, were
+ like herself, animated with that tendency to national expansion which I
+ have above described; and for a time it seemed doubtful who should
+ ultimately possess the vast plains of Eastern Europe. The chief
+ competitors were the Tsars of Moscow and the Kings of Poland, and the
+ latter appeared to have the better chance. In close connection with
+ Western Europe, they had been able to adopt many of the improvements which
+ had recently been made in the art of war, and they already possessed the
+ rich valley of the Dnieper. Once, with the help of the free Cossacks, they
+ succeeded in overrunning the whole of Muscovy, and a son of the Polish
+ king was elected Tsar in Moscow. By attempting to accomplish their purpose
+ in a too hasty and reckless fashion, they raised a storm of religious and
+ patriotic fanaticism, which very soon drove them out of their newly
+ acquired possessions. The country remained, however, in a very precarious
+ position, and its more intelligent rulers perceived plainly that, in order
+ to carry on the struggle successfully, they must import something of that
+ Western civilisation which gave such an advantage to their opponents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some steps had already been taken in that direction. In the year 1553 an
+ English navigator, whilst seeking for a short route to China and India,
+ had accidentally discovered the port of Archangel on the White Sea, and
+ since that time the Tsars had kept up an intermittent diplomatic and
+ commercial intercourse with England. But this route was at all times
+ tedious and dangerous, and during a great part of the year it was closed
+ by the ice. In view of these difficulties the Tsars tried to import
+ "cunning foreign artificers," by way of the Baltic; but their efforts were
+ hampered by the Livonian Order, who at that time held the east coast, and
+ who considered, like the Europeans on the coast of Africa at the present
+ day, that the barbarous natives of the interior should not be supplied
+ with arms and ammunition. All the other routes to the West traversed
+ likewise the territory of rivals, who might at any time become avowed
+ enemies. Under these circumstances the Tsars naturally desired to break
+ through the barrier which hemmed them in, and the acquisition of the
+ eastern coast of the Baltic became one of the chief objects of Russia's
+ foreign policy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Poland, Russia's most formidable rival was Sweden. That power early
+ acquired a large amount of territory to the east of the Baltic&mdash;including
+ the mouths of the Neva, where St. Petersburg now stands&mdash;and long
+ harboured ambitious schemes of further conquest. In the troublous times
+ when the Poles overran the Tsardom of Muscovy, she took advantage of the
+ occasion to annex a considerable amount of territory, and her expansion in
+ this direction went on in intermittent fashion until it was finally
+ stopped by Peter the Great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In comparison with these two rivals Russia was weak in all that regarded
+ the art of war; but she had two immense advantages: she had a very large
+ population, and a strong, stable Government that could concentrate the
+ national forces for any definite purpose. All that she required for
+ success in the competition was an army on the European model. Peter the
+ Great created such an army, and won the prize. After this the political
+ disintegration of Poland proceeded rapidly, and when that unhappy country
+ fell to pieces Russia naturally took for herself the lion's share of the
+ spoil. Sweden, too, sank to political insignificance, and gradually lost
+ all her trans-Baltic possessions. The last of them&mdash;the Grand Duchy
+ of Finland, which stretches from the Gulf of Finland to the Polar Ocean&mdash;was
+ ceded to Russia by the peace of Friederichshamm in 1809.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+The territorial extent of all these acquisitions will be best shown in
+a tabular form. The following table represents the process of expansion
+from the time when Ivan III. united the independent principalities and
+threw off the Tartar yoke, down to the accession of Peter the Great in
+1682:
+
+
+ English
+ Sq. Miles.
+ In 1505 the Tsardom of Muscovy contained about 784,000
+ " 1583 " " " " 996,000
+ " 1584 " " " " 2,650,000
+ " 1598 " " " " 3,328,000
+ " 1676 " " " " 5,448,000
+ " 1682 " " " " 5,618,000
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Of these 5,618,000 English square miles about 1,696,000 were in Europe and
+ about 3,922,000 in Asia. Peter the Great, though famous as a conqueror,
+ did not annex nearly so much territory as many of his predecessors and
+ successors. At his death, in 1752, the Empire contained, in round numbers,
+ 1,738,000 square miles in Europe and 4,092,000 in Asia. The following
+ table shows the subsequent expansion:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ In Europe and the Caucasus In Asia.
+ Eng. sq. m Eng. sq. m.
+ In 1725 the Russian Empire contained about 1,738,000 4,092,000
+ " 1770 " " " " 1,780,000 4,452,000
+ " 1800 " " " " 2,014,000 4,452,000
+ " 1825 " " " " 2,226,000 4,452,000
+ " 1855 " " " " 2,261,250 5,194,000
+ " 1867 " " " " 2,267,360 5,267,560
+ " 1897 " " " " 2,267,360 6,382,321
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In this table is not included the territory in the North-west of America&mdash;containing
+ about 513,250 English square miles&mdash;which was annexed to Russia in
+ 1799 and ceded to the United States in 1867.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When once Russia has annexed she does not readily relax her grasp. She
+ has, however, since the death of Peter the Great, on four occasions ceded
+ territory which had come into her possession. To Persia she ceded, in
+ 1729, Mazanderan and Astrabad, and in 1735 a large portion of the
+ Caucasus; in 1856, by the Treaty of Paris, she gave up the mouths of the
+ Danube and part of Bessarabia; in 1867 she sold to the United States her
+ American possessions; in 1881 she retroceded to China the greater part of
+ Kuldja, which she had occupied for ten years; and now she is releasing her
+ hold on Manchuria under the pressure of Japan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The increase in the population&mdash;due in part to territorial
+ acquisitions&mdash;since 1722, when the first census was taken, has been
+ as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ In 1722 the Empire contained about 14 million inhabitants.
+ " 1742 " " " 16 "
+ " 1762 " " " 19 "
+ " 1782 " " " 28 "
+ " 1796 " " " 36 "
+ " 1812 " " " 41 "
+ " 1815 " " " 45 "
+ " 1835 " " " 60 "
+ " 1851 " " " 68 "
+ " 1858 " " " 44 "
+ " 1897 " " " 129 "
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ So much for the past. To sum up, we may say that, if we have read Russian
+ history aright, the chief motives of expansion have been spontaneous
+ colonisation, self-defence against nomadic tribes, and high political
+ aims, such as the desire to reach the sea-coast; and that the process has
+ been greatly facilitated by peculiar geographical conditions and the
+ autocratic form of government. Before passing to the future, I must
+ mention another cause of expansion which has recently come into play, and
+ which has already acquired very great importance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russia is rapidly becoming, as I have explained in a previous chapter, a
+ great industrial and commercial nation, and is anxious to acquire new
+ markets for her manufactured goods. Though her industries cannot yet
+ supply her own wants, she likes to peg out claims for the future, so as
+ not to be forestalled by more advanced nations. I am not sure that she
+ ever makes a conquest exclusively for this purpose, but whenever it
+ happens that she has other reasons for widening her borders, the idea of
+ acquiring commercial advantages acts as a subsidiary incentive, and as
+ soon as the territory is annexed she raises round it a line of commercial
+ fortifications in the shape of custom-houses, through which foreign goods
+ have great difficulty in forcing their way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This policy is quite intelligible from the patriotic point of view, but
+ Russians like to justify it, and condemn English competition, on higher
+ ground. England, they say, is like a successful manufacturer who has
+ oustripped his rivals and who seeks to prevent any new competitors from
+ coming into the field. By her mercantile policy she has become the great
+ blood-sucker of other nations. Having no cause to fear competition, she
+ advocates the insidious principles of Free Trade, and deluges foreign
+ countries with her manufactures to such an extent that unprotected native
+ industries are inevitably ruined. Thus all nations have long paid tribute
+ to England, but the era of emancipation had dawned. The fallacies of Free
+ Trade have been detected and exposed, and Russia, like other nations, has
+ found in the beneficent power of protective tariffs a means of escape from
+ British economic thraldom. Henceforth, not only the muzhiks of European
+ Russia, but also the populations of Central Asia, will be saved from the
+ heartless exploitation of Manchester and Birmingham&mdash;and be handed
+ over, I presume, to the tender mercies of the manufacturers of Moscow and
+ St. Petersburg, who sell their goods much dearer than their English
+ rivals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having thus analysed the expansive tendency, let us endeavour to determine
+ how the various factors of which it is composed are acting in the present
+ and are likely to act in the future. In this investigation it will be well
+ to begin with the simpler, and proceed gradually to the more complex parts
+ of the problem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards the north and the west the history of Russian expansion may almost
+ be regarded as closed. Northwards there is nothing to be annexed but the
+ Arctic Ocean and the Polar regions; and, westwards, annexations at the
+ expense of Germany are not to be thought of. There remain, therefore, only
+ Sweden and Norway. They may possibly, at some future time, come within the
+ range of Russia's territorial appetite, but at present the only part of
+ the Scandinavian Peninsula on which she is supposed to cast longing eyes
+ is a barren district in the extreme north, which is said to contain an
+ excellent warm-water port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards the south-west there are possibilities of future expansion, and
+ already some people talk of Austrian Galicia being geographically and
+ ethnographically a part of Russia; but so long as the Austro-Hungarian
+ Empire holds together such possibilities do not come within the sphere of
+ practical politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Farther east, towards the Balkan Peninsula, the expansive tendency is much
+ more complicated and of very ancient date. The Russo-Slavs who held the
+ valley of the Dnieper from the ninth to the thirteenth century belonged to
+ those numerous frontier tribes which the tottering Byzantine Empires
+ attempted to ward off by diplomacy and rich gifts, and by giving to the
+ troublesome chiefs, on condition of their accepting Christianity,
+ princesses of the Imperial family as brides. Vladimir, Prince of Kief, now
+ recognised as a Saint by the Russian Church, accepted Christianity in this
+ way (A. D. 988), and his subjects followed his example. Russia thus became
+ ecclesiastically a part of the Patriarchate of Constantinople, and the
+ people learned to regard Tsargrad&mdash;that is, the City of the Tsar, as
+ the Byzantine Emperor was then called&mdash;with peculiar veneration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All through the long Tartar domination, when the nomadic hordes held the
+ valley of the Dnieper and formed a barrier between Russia and the Balkan
+ Peninsula, the capital of the Greek Orthodox world was remembered and
+ venerated by the Russian people, and in the fifteenth century it acquired
+ in their eyes a new significance. At that time the relative positions of
+ Constantinople and Moscow were changed. Constantinople fell under the
+ power of the Mahometan Turks, whilst Moscow threw off the yoke of the
+ Mahometan Tartars, the northern representatives of the Turkish race. The
+ Grand Prince of Moscow thereby became the Protector of the Faith, and in
+ some sort the successor of the Byzantine Tsars. To strengthen this claim,
+ Ivan III. married a niece of the last Byzantine Emperor, and his
+ successors went further in the same direction by assuming the title of
+ Tsar, and inventing a fable about their ancestor Rurik having been a
+ descendant of Caesar Augustus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this would seem to a lawyer, or even to a diplomatist, a very shadowy
+ title, and none of the Russian monarchs&mdash;except perhaps Catherine
+ II., who conceived the project of resuscitating the Byzantine Empire, and
+ caused one of her grandsons to learn modern Greek, in view of possible
+ contingencies&mdash;ever thought seriously of claiming the imaginary
+ heritage; but the idea that the Tsars ought to reign in Tsargrad, and that
+ St. Sophia, polluted by Moslem abominations, should be restored to the
+ Orthodox Christians, struck deep root in the minds of the Russian people,
+ and is still by no means extinct. As soon as serious disturbances break
+ out in the East the peasantry begin to think that perhaps the time has
+ come for undertaking a crusade for the recovery of the Holy City on the
+ Bosphorus, and for the liberation of their brethren in the faith who groan
+ under Turkish bondage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Essentially different from this religious sentiment, but often blended
+ with it, is a vague feeling of racial affinity, which has long existed
+ among the various Slav nationalities, and which was greatly developed
+ during last century by writers of the Panslavist school. When Germans and
+ Italians were striving after political independence and unity, it
+ naturally occurred to the Slavs that they might do likewise. The idea
+ became popular among the subject Slav nationalities of Austria and Turkey,
+ and it awoke a certain amount of enthusiasm in Moscow, where it was hoped
+ that "all the Slav streams would unite in the great Russian Sea." It
+ required no great political perspicacity to foresee that in any
+ confederation of Slav nationalities the hegemony must necessarily devolve
+ on Russia, the only Slav State which has succeeded in becoming a Great
+ Power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those two currents of national feeling ran parallel to, and intermingled
+ with, the policy of the Government. Desirous of becoming a great naval
+ Power, Russia has always striven to reach the sea-coast and obtain good
+ harbours. In the north and north-west she succeeded in a certain degree,
+ but neither the White Sea nor the Baltic satisfied her requirements, and
+ she naturally turned her eyes to the Mediterranean. With difficulty she
+ gained possession of the northern shores of the Black Sea, but her designs
+ were thereby only half realised, because the Turks held the only outlet to
+ the Mediterranean, and could effectually blockade, so far as the open sea
+ is concerned, all her Black Sea ports, without employing a single ship of
+ war. Thus the possession of the Straits, involving necessarily the
+ possession of Constantinople, became a cardinal point of Russia's foreign
+ policy. Any description of the various methods adopted by her at different
+ times for the attainment of this end does not enter into my present
+ programme, but I may say briefly that the action of the three factors
+ above mentioned&mdash;the religious feeling, the Panslavist sentiment, and
+ the political aims&mdash;has never been better exemplified than in the
+ last struggle with Turkey, culminating in the Treaty of San Stefano and
+ the Congress of Berlin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For all classes in Russia the result of that struggle was a feeling of
+ profound disappointment. The peasantry bewailed the fact that the Crescent
+ on St. Sophia had not been replaced by the Cross; the Slavophil patriots
+ were indignant that the "little brothers" had shown themselves unworthy of
+ the generous efforts and sacrifices made on their behalf, and that a
+ portion of the future Slav confederation had passed under the domination
+ of Austria; and the Government recognised that the acquisition of the
+ Straits must be indefinitely postponed. Then history repeated itself.
+ After the Crimean War, in accordance with Prince Gortchakoff's famous
+ epigram, La Russie ne boude pas elle se recueille, the Government had for
+ some years abandoned an active policy in Europe, and devoted itself to the
+ work of internal reorganisation; whilst the military party had turned
+ their attention to making new acquisitions of territory and influence in
+ Asia. In like manner, after the Turkish campaign of 1877-78, Alexander
+ III., turning his back on the Slav brethren, inaugurated an era of peace
+ in Europe and of territorial expansion in the east. In this direction the
+ expansive force was not affected by religious feeling, or Panslavist
+ sentiment, and was controlled and guided by purely political
+ considerations. It is consequently much easier to determine in this field
+ of action what the political aims really are.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Asia, as in Europe, the dominant factor in the policy of the Government
+ has been the desire to reach the sea-coast; and in both continents the
+ ports first acquired were in northern latitudes where the coasts are free
+ from ice during only a part of the year. In this respect, Nikolaefsk and
+ Vladivostok in the Far East correspond to Archangel and St. Petersburg in
+ Europe. Such ports could not fulfil all the requirements, and consequently
+ the expansive tendency turned southwards&mdash;in Europe towards the Black
+ Sea and the Mediterranean, and in Asia towards the Persian Gulf, the
+ Indian Ocean and the Gulf of Pechili.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Persia the Russian Government pursues the policy of pacific
+ infiltration, and already the northern half of the Shah's dominions is
+ pretty well permeated with Russian influence, commercial and political. In
+ the southern half the infiltration is to some extent checked by physical
+ obstacles and British influence, but it is steadily advancing, and the
+ idea of obtaining a port on the Persian Gulf is coming within the range of
+ practical politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Afghanistan also the pressure is felt, and here too the expansive
+ tendency meets with opposition from England. More than once the two great
+ Powers have come dangerously near to war&mdash;notably in 1885, at the
+ moment of the Penjdeh incident, when the British Parliament voted
+ 11,000,000 pounds for military preparations. Fortunately on that occasion
+ the problem was solved by diplomacy. The northern frontier of Afghanistan
+ was demarcated by a joint commission, and an agreement was come to by
+ which this line should form the boundary of the British and Russian
+ spheres of influence. For some years Russia scrupulously respected this
+ agreement, but during our South African difficulties she showed symptoms
+ of departing from it, and at one moment orders were issued from St.
+ Petersburg for a military demonstration on the Afghan frontier. Strange to
+ say, the military authorities, who are usually very bellicose, deprecated
+ such a movement, on the ground that a military demonstration in a country
+ like Afghanistan might easily develop into a serious campaign, and that a
+ serious campaign ought not to be undertaken in that region until after the
+ completion of the strategical railways from Orenburg to Tashkent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As this important line has now been completed, and other strategic lines
+ are in contemplation, the question arises whether Russia meditates an
+ attack on India. It is a question which is not easily answered. No doubt
+ there are many Russians who think it would be a grand thing to annex our
+ Indian Empire, with its teeming millions and its imaginary fabulous
+ treasures, and not a few young officers imagine that it would be an easy
+ task. Further, it is certain that the problem of an invasion has been
+ studied by the Headquarters Staff in St. Petersburg, just as the problem
+ of an invasion of England has been studied by the Headquarters Staff in
+ Berlin. It may be pretty safely asserted, however, that the idea of a
+ conquest of India has never been seriously entertained in the Russian
+ official world. What has been seriously entertained, not only in the
+ official world, but by the Government itself, is the idea&mdash;strongly
+ recommended by the late General Skobelef&mdash;that Russia should, as
+ quickly as possible, get within striking distance of our Indian
+ possessions, so that she may always be able to bring strong diplomatic
+ pressure on the British Government, and in the event of a conflict
+ immobilise a large part of the British army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The expansive tendency in the direction of the Persian Gulf and the Indian
+ Ocean was considerably weakened by the completion of the Trans-Siberian
+ Railway and the rapid development of an aggressive policy in the Far east.
+ Never, perhaps, has the construction of a single line produced such deep
+ and lasting changes in the sphere of Weltpolitik.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the Trans-Siberian was being rapidly constructed a magnificent
+ prospect opened up to the gaze of imaginative politicians in St.
+ Petersburg. The foreground was Manchuria a region of 364,000 square miles,
+ endowed by nature with enormous mineral resources, and presenting a
+ splendid field for agricultural colonisation and commercial enterprise.
+ Beyond was seen Korea, geographically an appendix of Manchuria, possessing
+ splendid harbours, and occupied by an effete, unwarlike population, wholly
+ incapable of resisting a European Power. That was quite enough to inflame
+ the imagination of patriotic Russians; but there was something more, dimly
+ perceived in the background. Once in possession of Manchuria, supplied
+ with a network of railways, Russia would dominate Peking and the whole of
+ Northern China, and she would thus be able to play a decisive part in the
+ approaching struggle of the European Powers for the Far-Eastern Sick Man's
+ inheritance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course there were obstacles in the way of realising this grandiose
+ scheme, and there were some cool heads in St. Petersburg who were not slow
+ to point them out. In the first place the undertaking must be extremely
+ costly, and the economic condition of Russia proper was not such as to
+ justify the expenditure of an enormous capital which must be for many
+ years unproductive. Any superfluous capital which the country might
+ possess was much more urgently required for purposes of internal
+ development, and the impoverished agricultural population ought not to be
+ drained of their last meagre reserves for the sake of gigantic political
+ schemes which did not directly contribute to their material welfare. To
+ this the enthusiastic advocates of the forward policy replied that the
+ national finances had never been in such a prosperous condition, that the
+ revenue was increasing by leaps and bounds, that the money invested in the
+ proposed enterprise would soon be repaid with interest; and that if Russia
+ did not at once seize the opportunity she would find herself forestalled
+ by energetic rivals. There was still, however, one formidable objection.
+ Such an enormous increase of Russia's power in the Far East would
+ inevitably arouse the jealousy and opposition of other Powers, especially
+ of Japan, for whom the future of Korea and Manchuria was a question of
+ life and death. Here again these advocates of the forward policy had their
+ answer ready. They declared that the danger was more apparent than real.
+ In Far-Eastern diplomacy the European Powers could not compete with
+ Russia, and they might easily be bought off by giving them a very modest
+ share of the spoil; as for Japan, she was not formidable, for she was just
+ emerging from Oriental barbarism, and all her boasted progress was nothing
+ more than a thin veneer of European civilisation. As the Moscow patriots
+ on the eve of the Crimean War said contemptuously of the Allies, "We have
+ only to throw our hats at them," so now the believers in Russia's historic
+ mission in the Far East spoke of their future opponents as "monkeys" and
+ "parrots."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The war between China and Japan in 1894-5, terminating in the Treaty of
+ Shimonoseki, which ceded to Japan the Liaotung Peninsula, showed Russia
+ that if she was not to be forestalled she must be up and doing. She
+ accordingly formed a coalition with France and Germany, and compelled
+ Japan to withdraw from the mainland, on the pretext that the integrity of
+ China must be maintained. In this way China recovered, for a moment, a bit
+ of lost territory, and further benefits were conferred on her by a
+ guarantee for a foreign loan, and by the creation of the Russo-Chinese
+ Bank, which would assist her in her financial affairs. For these and other
+ favours she was expected to be grateful, and it was suggested to her that
+ her gratitude might take the form of facilitating the construction of the
+ Trans-Siberian Railway. If constructed wholly on Russian territory the
+ line would have to make an enormous bend to the northward, whereas if it
+ went straight from Lake Baikal to Vladivostok it would be very much
+ shorter, and would confer a very great benefit on the north-eastern
+ provinces of the Celestial Empire. This benefit, moreover, might be
+ greatly increased by making a branch line to Talienwan and Port Arthur,
+ which would some day be united with Peking. Gradually Li-Hung-Chang and
+ other influential Chinese officials were induced to sympathise with the
+ scheme, and a concession was granted for the direct line to Vladivostok
+ through Chinese territory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The retrocession of the Liaotung Peninsula had not been effected by Russia
+ alone. Germany and France had co-operated, and they also expected from
+ China a mark of gratitude in some tangible form. On this point the
+ statesmen of Berlin held very strong views, and they thought it advisable
+ to obtain a material guarantee for the fulfilment of their expectations by
+ seizing Kiaochau, on the ground that German missionaries had been murdered
+ by Chinese fanatics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For Russia this was a most unwelcome incident. She had earmarked Kiaochau
+ for her own purposes, and had already made an agreement with the
+ authorities in Peking that the harbour might be used freely by her fleet.
+ And this was not the worst. The incident might inaugurate an era of
+ partition for which she was not yet prepared, and another port which she
+ had earmarked for her own use might be seized by a rival. Already English
+ ships of war were reported to be prowling about in the vicinity of the
+ Liaotung Peninsula. She hastened to demand, therefore, as a set-off for
+ the loss of Kiaochau, a lease of Port Arthur and Talienwan, and a railway
+ concession to unite these ports with the Trans-Siberian Railway. The
+ Chinese Government was too weak to think of refusing the demands, and the
+ process of gradually absorbing Manchuria began, in accordance with a plan
+ already roughly sketched out in St. Petersburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the light of a few authentic documents and many subsequent events, the
+ outline of this plan can be traced with tolerable accuracy. In the region
+ through which the projected railways were to run there was a large
+ marauding population, and consequently the labourers and the works would
+ have to be protected; and as Chinese troops can never be thoroughly relied
+ on, the protecting force must be Russian. Under this rather transparent
+ disguise a small army of occupation could be gradually introduced, and in
+ establishing a modus vivendi between it and the Chinese civil and military
+ authorities a predominant influence in the local administration could be
+ established. At the same time, by energetic diplomatic action at Peking,
+ which would be brought within striking-distance by the railways, all rival
+ foreign influences might be excluded from the occupied provinces, and the
+ rest might be left to the action of "spontaneous infiltration." Thus,
+ while professing to uphold the principle of the territorial integrity of
+ the Celestial Empire, the Cabinet of St. Petersburg might practically
+ annex the whole of Manchuria and transform Port Arthur into a great naval
+ port and arsenal, a far more effectual "Dominator of the East" than
+ Vladivostok, which was intended, as its name implies, to fulfil that
+ function. From Manchuria the political influence and the spontaneous
+ infiltration would naturally extend to Korea, and on the deeply indented
+ coast of the Hermit Kingdom new ports and arsenals, far more spacious and
+ strategically more important than Port Arthur, might be constructed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The grandiose scheme was carefully laid, and for a time it was favoured by
+ circumstances. In 1900 the Boxer troubles justified Russia in sending a
+ large force into Manchuria, and enabled her subsequently to play the part
+ of China's protector against the inordinate demands of the Western Powers
+ for compensation and guarantees. For a moment it seemed as if the slow
+ process of gradual infiltration might be replaced by a more expeditious
+ mode of annexation. As the dexterous diplomacy of Ignatief in 1858 had
+ induced the Son of Heaven to cede to Russia the rich Primorsk provinces
+ between the Amur and the sea, as compensation for Russian protection
+ against the English and French, who had burnt his Summer Palace, so his
+ successor might now perhaps be induced to cede Manchuria to the Tsar for
+ similar reasons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No such cession actually took place, but the Russian diplomatists in
+ Peking could use the gratitude argument in support of their demands for an
+ extension of the rights and privileges of the "temporary" occupation; and
+ when China sought to resist the pressure by leaning on the rival Powers
+ she found them to be little better than broken reeds. France could not
+ openly oppose her ally, and Germany had reasons of her own for
+ conciliating the Tsar, whilst England and the United States, though
+ avowedly opposing the scheme as dangerous to their commercial interests,
+ were not prepared to go to war in defence of their policy. It seemed,
+ therefore, that by patience, tenacity and diplomatic dexterity Russia
+ might ultimately attain her ends; but a surprise was in store for her.
+ There was one Power which recognised that her own vital interests were at
+ stake, and which was ready to undertake a life-and-death struggle in
+ defence of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though still smarting under the humiliation of her expulsion from the
+ Liaotung Peninsula in 1895, and watching with the keenest interest every
+ move in the political game, Japan had remained for some time in the
+ background, and had confined her efforts to resisting Russian influence in
+ Korea and supporting diplomatically the Powers who were upholding the
+ policy of the open door. Now, when it had become evident that the Western
+ Powers would not prevent the realisation of the Russian scheme, she
+ determined to intervene energetically, and to stake her national existence
+ on the result. Ever since 1895 she had been making military and naval
+ preparations for the day of the revanche, and now that day was at hand.
+ Against the danger of a coalition such as had checkmated her on the
+ previous occasion she was protected by the alliance which she had
+ concluded with England in 1902, and she felt confident that with Russia
+ alone she was quite capable of dealing single-handed. Her position is
+ briefly and graphically described in a despatch, telegraphed at that time
+ (28th July, 1903) by the Japanese Government to its representative at St.
+ Petersburg, instructing him to open negotiations:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The recent conduct of Russia in making new demands at Peking and
+ tightening her hold upon Manchuria has led the Imperial Government to
+ believe that she must have abandoned her intention of retiring from that
+ province. At the same time, her increased activity upon the Korean
+ frontier is such as to raise doubts as to the limits of her ambition. The
+ unconditional and permanent occupation of Manchuria by Russia would create
+ a state of things prejudicial to the security and interests of Japan. The
+ principle of equal opportunity (the open door) would thereby be annulled,
+ and the territorial integrity of China impaired. There is, however, a
+ still more serious consideration for the Japanese Government. If Russia
+ were established on the flank of Korea she would constantly menace the
+ separate existence of that Empire, or at least exercise in it a
+ predominant influence; and as Japan considers Korea an important outpost
+ in her line of defence, she regards its independence as absolutely
+ essential to her own repose and safety. Moreover, the political as well as
+ commercial and industrial interests and influence which Japan possesses in
+ Korea are paramount over those of other Powers; she cannot, having regard
+ to her own security, consent to surrender them to, or share them with,
+ another Power."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In accordance with this view of the situation the Japanese Government
+ informed Count Lamsdorff that, as it desired to remove from the relations
+ of the two Empires every cause of future misunderstanding, it would be
+ glad to enter with the Imperial Russian Government upon an examination of
+ the condition of affairs in the Far East, with a view to defining the
+ respective special interests of the two countries in those regions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though Count Lamsdorff accepted the proposal with apparent cordiality and
+ professed to regard it as a means of preventing any outsider from sowing
+ the seeds of discord between the two countries, the idea of a general
+ discussion was not at all welcome. Careful definition of respective
+ interests was the last thing the Russian Government desired. Its policy
+ was to keep the whole situation in a haze until it had consolidated its
+ position in Manchuria and on the Korean frontier to such an extent that it
+ could dictate its own terms in any future arrangement. It could not,
+ however, consistently with its oft-repeated declarations of
+ disinterestedness and love of peace, decline to discuss the subject. It
+ consented, therefore, to an exchange of views, but in order to ensure that
+ the tightening of its hold on the territories in question should proceed
+ pari passu with the diplomatic action, it made an extraordinary departure
+ from ordinary procedure, entrusting the conduct of the affair, not to
+ Count Lamsdorff and the Foreign Office, but to Admiral Alexeyef, the newly
+ created Viceroy of the Far East, in whom was vested the control of all
+ civil, military, naval, and diplomatic affairs relating to that part of
+ the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the commencement of the negotiations, which lasted from August 12th,
+ 1903, to February 6th, 1904, the irreconcilable differences of the two
+ rivals became apparent, and all through the correspondence, in which a few
+ apparent concessions were offered by Japan, neither Power retreated a step
+ from the positions originally taken up. What Japan suggested was, roughly
+ speaking, a mutual engagement to uphold the independence and integrity of
+ the Chinese and Korean empires, and at the same time a bilateral
+ arrangement by which the special interests of the two contracting parties
+ in Manchuria and in Korea should be formally recognised, and the means of
+ protecting them clearly defined. The scheme did not commend itself to the
+ Russians. They systematically ignored the interests of Japan in Manchuria,
+ and maintained that she had no right to interfere in any arrangements they
+ might think fit to make with the Chinese Government with regard to that
+ province. In their opinion, Japan ought to recognise formally that
+ Manchuria lay outside her sphere of interest, and the negotiations should
+ be confined to limiting her freedom of action in Korea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With such a wide divergence in principle the two parties were not likely
+ to agree in matters of detail. Their conflicting aims came out most
+ clearly in the question of the open door. The Japanese insisted on
+ obtaining the privileges of the open door, including the right of
+ settlement in Manchuria, and Russia obstinately refused. Having marked out
+ Manchuria as a close reserve for her own colonisation, trade, and
+ industry, and knowing that she could not compete with the Japanese if they
+ were freely admitted, she could not adopt the principle of "equal
+ opportunity" which her rivals recommended. A fidus achates of Admiral
+ Alexeyef explained to me quite frankly, during the negotiations, why no
+ concessions could be made on that point. In the work of establishing law
+ and order in Manchuria, constructing roads, bridges, railways, and towns,
+ Russia had expended an enormous sum&mdash;estimated by Count Cassini at
+ 60,000,000 pounds&mdash;and until that capital was recovered, or until a
+ reasonable interest was derived from the investment, Russia could not
+ think of sharing with any one the fruits of the prosperity which she had
+ created.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We need not go further into the details of the negotiations. Japan soon
+ convinced herself that the onward march of the Colossus was not to be
+ stopped by paper barricades, and knowing well that her actual military and
+ naval superiority was being rapidly diminished by Russia's warlike
+ preparations,* she suddenly broke off diplomatic relations and commenced
+ hostilities.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * According to an estimate made by the Japanese authorities,
+ between April, 1903, and the outbreak of the war, Russia
+ increased her naval and military forces in the Far East by
+ nineteen war vessels, aggregating 82,415 tons, and 40,000
+ soldiers. In addition to this, one battleship, three
+ cruisers, seven torpedo destroyers, and four torpedo boats,
+ aggregating about 37,040 tons, were on their way to the
+ East, and preparations had been made for increasing the land
+ forces by 200,000 men. For further details, see Asakawa,
+ "The Russo-Japanese Conflict" (London, 1904), pp. 352-54.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Russia thus found herself engaged in a war of the first magnitude, of
+ which no one can predict the ultimate consequences, and the question
+ naturally arises as to why, with an Emperor who lately aspired to play in
+ politics the part of a great peacemaker, she provoked a conflict, for
+ which she was very imperfectly prepared&mdash;imposing on herself the
+ obligation of defending a naval fortress, hastily constructed on foreign
+ territory, and united with her base by a single line of railway 6,000
+ miles long. The question is easily answered: she did not believe in the
+ possibility of war. The Emperor was firmly resolved that he would not
+ attack Japan, and no one would admit for a moment that Japan could have
+ the audacity to attack the great Russian Empire. In the late autumn of
+ 1903, it is true, a few well-informed officials in St. Petersburg,
+ influenced by the warnings of Baron Rosen, the Russian Minister in Tokio,
+ began to perceive that perhaps Japan would provoke a conflict, but they
+ were convinced that the military and naval preparations already made were
+ quite sufficient to repel the attack. One of these officials&mdash;probably
+ the best informed of all&mdash;said to me quite frankly: "If Japan had
+ attacked us in May or June, we should have been in a sorry plight, but now
+ [November, 1903] we are ready."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole past history of territoral expansion in Asia tended to confirm
+ the prevailing illusions. Russia had advanced steadily from the Ural and
+ the Caspian to the Hindu Kush and the Northern Pacific without once
+ encountering serious resistance. Not once had she been called on to make a
+ great national effort, and the armed resistance of the native races had
+ never inflicted on her anything worse than pin-pricks. From decrepit
+ China, which possessed no army in the European sense of the term, a more
+ energetic resistance was not to be expected. Had not Muravieff Amurski
+ with a few Cossacks quietly occupied her Amur territories without
+ provoking anything more dangerous than a diplomatic protest; and had not
+ Ignatief annexed her rich Primorsk provinces, including the site of
+ Vladivostok, by purely diplomatic means? Why should not Count Cassini, a
+ diplomatist of the same type as Ignatief, imitate his adroit predecessor,
+ and secure for Russia, if not the formal annexation, at least the
+ permanent occupation, of Manchuria? Remembering all this, we can perceive
+ that the great mistake of the Russian Government is not so very difficult
+ to explain. It certainly did not want war&mdash;far from it&mdash;but it
+ wanted to obtain Manchuria by a gradual, painless process of absorption,
+ and it did not perceive that this could not be attained without a
+ life-and-death struggle with a young, vigorous nationality, which has
+ contrived to combine the passions and virtues of a primitive race with the
+ organising powers and scientific appliances of the most advanced
+ civilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russian territorial expansion has thus been checked, for some years to
+ come, on the Pacific coast; but the expansive tendency will re-appear soon
+ in other regions, and it behooves us to be watchful, because, whatever
+ direction it may take, it is likely to affect our interests directly or
+ indirectly. Will it confine itself for some years to a process of
+ infiltration in Mongolia and Northern Thibet, the line of least
+ resistance? Or will it impinge on our Indian frontier, directed by those
+ who desire to avenge themselves on Japan's ally for the reverses sustained
+ in Manchuria? Or will it once more take the direction of the Bosphorous,
+ where a campaign might be expected to awaken religious and warlike
+ enthusiasm among the masses? To these questions I cannot give any answer,
+ because so much depends on the internal consequences of the present war,
+ and on accidental circumstances which no one can at present foresee. I
+ have always desired, and still desire, that we should cultivate friendly
+ relations with our great rival, and that we should learn to appreciate the
+ many good qualities of her people; but I have at the same time always
+ desired that we should keep a watchful eye on her irrepressible tendency
+ to expand, and that we should take timely precautions against any
+ unprovoked aggression, however justifiable it may seem to her from the
+ point of view of her own national interests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0039" id="link2HCH0039">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXIX
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE PRESENT SITUATION
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Reform or Revolution?&mdash;Reigns of Alexander II. and Nicholas II.
+ Compared and Contrasted&mdash;The Present Opposition&mdash;Various Groups&mdash;The
+ Constitutionalists&mdash;Zemski Sobors&mdash;The Young Tsar Dispels
+ Illusions&mdash;Liberal Frondeurs&mdash;Plehve's Repressive Policy&mdash;Discontent
+ Increased by the War&mdash;Relaxation and Wavering under Prince Mirski&mdash;Reform
+ Enthusiasm&mdash;The Constitutionalists Formulate their Demands&mdash;The
+ Social Democrats&mdash;Father Gapon's Demonstration&mdash;The
+ Socialist-Revolutionaries&mdash;The Agrarian Agitators&mdash;The
+ Subject-Nationalities&mdash;Numerical Strength of the Various Groups&mdash;All
+ United on One Point&mdash;Their Different Aims&mdash;Possible Solutions of
+ the Crisis&mdash;Difficulties of Introducing Constitutional Regime&mdash;A
+ Strong Man Wanted&mdash;Uncertainty of the Future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is history about to repeat itself, or are we on the eve of a cataclysm? Is
+ the reign of Nicholas II. to be, in its main lines, a repetition of the
+ reign of Alexander II., or is Russia about to enter on an entirely new
+ phase of her political development?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this momentous question I do not profess to give a categorical answer.
+ If it be true, even in ordinary times, that "of all forms of human folly,
+ prediction is the most gratuitous," it is especially true at a moment like
+ the present, when we are constantly reminded of the French proverb that
+ there is nothing certain but the unforeseen. All I can hope to do is to
+ throw a little light on the elements of the problem, and allow the reader
+ to draw his own conclusions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between the present situation and the early part of Alexander II.'s reign
+ there is undoubtedly a certain analogy. In both cases we find in the
+ educated classes a passionate desire for political liberty, generated by
+ long years of a stern, autocratic regime, and stimulated by military
+ disasters for which autocracy is held responsible; and in both cases we
+ find the throne occupied by a Sovereign of less accentuated political
+ convictions and less energetic character than his immediate predecessor.
+ In the earlier case, the autocrat, showing more perspicacity and energy
+ than were expected of him, guides and controls the popular enthusiasm, and
+ postpones the threatened political crisis by effecting a series of far
+ reaching and beneficent reforms. In the present case . . . the description
+ of the result must be left to future historians. For the moment, all we
+ can say is that between the two situations there are as many points of
+ difference as of analogy. After the Crimean War the enthusiasm was of a
+ vague, eclectic kind, and consequently it could find satisfaction in
+ practical administrative reforms not affecting the essence of the
+ Autocratic Power, the main pivot round which the Empire has revolved for
+ centuries. Now, on the contrary, it is precisely on this pivot that the
+ reform enthusiasm is concentrated. Mere bureaucratic reforms can no longer
+ give satisfaction. All sections of the educated classes, with the
+ exception of a small group of Conservative doctrinaires, insist on
+ obtaining a controlling influence in the government of the country, and
+ demand that the Autocratic Power, if not abolished, shall be limited by
+ parliamentary institutions of a democratic type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another difference between the present and the past, is that those who now
+ clamour for radical changes are more numerous, more courageous, and better
+ organised than their predecessors, and they are consequently better able
+ to bring pressure to bear on the Government. Formerly the would-be
+ reformers were of two categories; on the one hand, the Constitutionalists,
+ who remained within the bounds of legality, and confined themselves to
+ inserting vague hints in loyal addresses to the Tsar and making mild
+ political demonstrations; and on the other hand, the so-called Nihilists,
+ who talked about organising society on Socialistic principles, and who
+ hoped to attain their object by means of secret associations. With both of
+ these groups, as soon as they became aggressive, the Government had no
+ difficulty in dealing effectually. The leading Constitutionalists were
+ simply reprimanded or ordered to remain for a time in their country
+ houses, while the more active revolutionaries were exiled, imprisoned, or
+ compelled to take refuge abroad. All this gave the police a good deal of
+ trouble, especially when the Nihilists took to Socialist propaganda among
+ the common people, and to acts of terrorism against the officials; but the
+ existence of the Autocratic Power was never seriously endangered. Nowadays
+ the Liberals have no fear of official reprimands, and openly disregard the
+ orders of the authorities about holding meetings and making speeches,
+ while a large section of the Socialists proclaim themselves a Social
+ Democratic party, enrol large numbers of working men, organise formidable
+ strikes, and make monster demonstrations leading to bloodshed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us now examine this new Opposition a little more closely. We can
+ perceive at a glance that it is composed of two sections, differing widely
+ from each other in character and aims. On the one hand, there are the
+ Liberals, who desire merely political reforms of a more or less democratic
+ type; on the other, there are the Socialists, who aim at transforming
+ thoroughly the existing economic organisation of Society, and who, if they
+ desire parliamentary institutions at all, desire them simply as a stepping
+ stone to the realisation of the Socialist ideal. Behind the Socialists,
+ and to some extent mingling with them, stand a number of men belonging to
+ the various subject-nationalities, who have placed themselves under the
+ Socialist banner, but who hold, more or less concealed, their little
+ national flags, ready to be unfurled at the proper moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of these three sections of the Opposition, the most numerous and the best
+ prepared to undertake the functions and responsibilities of government is
+ that of the Liberals. The movement which they represent began immediately
+ after the Crimean War, when the upper ranks of society, smarting under
+ defeat and looking about for the cause of the military disasters, came to
+ the conclusion that Autocracy had been put to a crucial test, and found
+ wanting. The outburst of patriotic indignation at that time and the eager
+ desire for a more liberal regime have been described in previous chapters.
+ For a moment the more sanguine critics of the Government imagined that the
+ Autocratic Power, persuaded of its own inefficiency, would gladly accept
+ the assistance of the educated classes, and would spontaneously transform
+ itself into a Constitutional Monarchy. In reality Alexander II. had no
+ such intentions. He was resolved to purify the administration and to
+ reform as far as possible all existing abuses, and he seemed ready at
+ first to listen to the advice and accept the co-operation of his faithful
+ subjects; but he had not the slightest intention of limiting his supreme
+ authority, which he regarded as essential to the existence of the Empire.
+ As soon as the landed proprietors began to complain that the great
+ question of serf emancipation was being taken out of their hands by the
+ bureaucracy, he reminded them that "in Russia laws are made by the
+ Autocratic Power," and when the more courageous Marshals of Noblesse
+ ventured to protest against the unceremonious manner in which the nobles
+ were being treated by the tchinovniks, some of them were officially
+ reprimanded and others were deposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The indignation produced by this procedure, in which the Tsar identified
+ himself with the bureaucracy, was momentarily appeased by the decision of
+ the Government to entrust to the landed proprietors the carrying out of
+ the Emancipation law, and by the confident hope that political rights
+ would be granted them as compensation for the material sacrifices they had
+ made for the good of the State; but when they found that this confident
+ hope was an illusion, the indignation and discontent reappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was still, however, a ray of hope. Though the Autocratic Power was
+ evidently determined not to transform itself at once into a limited
+ Constitutional Monarchy, it might make concessions in the sphere of local
+ self-government. At that moment it was creating the Zemstvo, and the
+ Constitutionalists hoped that these new institutions, though restricted
+ legally to the sphere of purely economic wants, might gradually acquire a
+ considerable political influence. Learned Germans had proved that in
+ England, "the mother of modern Constitutionalism," it was on local
+ self-government that the political liberties were founded, and the
+ Slavophils now suggested that by means of an ancient institution called
+ the Zemski Sobor, the Zemstvo might gradually and naturally acquire a
+ political character in accordance with Russian historic development. As
+ this idea has often been referred to in recent discussions, I may explain
+ briefly what the ancient institution in question was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Tsardom of Muscovy during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
+ representative assemblies were occasionally called together to deal with
+ matters of exceptional importance, such as the election of a Tsar when the
+ throne became vacant, a declaration of war, the conclusion of a peace, or
+ the preparation of a new code of laws. Some fifteen assemblies of the kind
+ were convoked in the space of about a century (1550-1653). They were
+ composed largely of officials named by the Government, but they contained
+ also some representatives of the unofficial classes. Their procedure was
+ peculiar. When a speech from the throne had been read by the Tsar or his
+ representative, explaining the question to be decided, the assembly
+ transformed itself into a large number of commissions, and each commission
+ had to give in writing its opinion regarding the questions submitted to
+ it. The opinions thus elicited were codified by the officials and
+ submitted to the Tsar, and he was free to adopt or reject them, as he
+ thought fit. We may say, therefore, that the Zemski Sobor was merely
+ consultative and had no legislative power; but we must add that it was
+ allowed a certain initiative, because it was permitted to submit to the
+ Tsar humble petitions regarding anything which it considered worthy of
+ attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander II. might have adopted this Slavophil idea and used the Zemski
+ Sobor as a means of transition from pure autocracy to a more modern system
+ of government, but he had no sooner created the Zemstvo than he thought it
+ necessary, as we have seen, to clip its wings, and dispel its political
+ ambition. By this repressive policy the frondeur spirit of the Noblesse
+ was revived, and it has continued to exist down to the present time. On
+ each occasion when I revisited Russia and had an opportunity of feeling
+ the pulse of public opinion, between 1876 and 1903, I noticed that the
+ dissatisfaction with the traditional methods of government, and the desire
+ of the educated classes to obtain a share of the political power,
+ notwithstanding short periods of apparent apathy, were steadily spreading
+ in area and increasing in intensity, and I often heard predictions that a
+ disastrous foreign war like the Crimean campaign would probably bring
+ about the desired changes. Of those who made such predictions not a few
+ showed clearly that, though patriotic enough in a certain sense, they
+ would not regret any military disaster which would have the effect they
+ anticipated. Progress in the direction of political emancipation,
+ accompanied by radical improvements in the administration, was evidently
+ regarded as much more important and desirable than military prestige or
+ extension of territory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the first part of the Turkish campaign of 1877-78, when the Russian
+ armies were repulsed in Bulgaria and Asia Minor, the hostility to
+ autocracy was very strong, and the famous acquittal of Vera Zasulitch, who
+ had attempted to assassinate General Trepof, caused widespread
+ satisfaction among people who were not themselves revolutionaries and who
+ did not approve of such violent methods of political struggle. Towards the
+ end of the war, when the tide of fortune had turned both in Europe and in
+ Asia, and the Russian army was encamped under the walls of Constantinople,
+ within sight of St. Sophia, the Chauvinist feelings gained the upper hand,
+ and they were greatly intensified by the Congress of Berlin, which
+ deprived Russia of some fruits of her victories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This change in public feeling and the horror excited by the assassination
+ of Alexander II. prepared the way for Alexander III.'s reign (1881-94),
+ which was a period of political stagnation. He was a man of strong
+ character, and a vigorous ruler who believed in Autocracy as he did in the
+ dogmas of his Church; and very soon after his accession he gave it clearly
+ to be understood that he would permit no limitations of the Autocratic
+ Power. The men with Liberal aspirations knew that nothing would make him
+ change his mind on that subject, and that any Liberal demonstrations would
+ merely confirm him in his reactionary tendencies. They accordingly
+ remained quiet and prudently waited for better times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The better times were supposed to have come when Nicholas II. ascended the
+ throne in November, 1894, because it was generally assumed that the young
+ Tsar, who was known to be humane and well-intentioned, would inaugurate a
+ more liberal policy. Before he had been three months on the throne he
+ summarily destroyed these illusions. On 17th (29th) January, 1895, when
+ receiving deputies from the Noblesse, the Zemstvo, and the municipalities,
+ who had come to St. Petersburg to congratulate him on his marriage, he
+ declared his confidence in the sincerity of the loyal feelings which the
+ delegates expressed; and then, to the astonishment of all present, he
+ added: "It is known to me that recently, in some Zemstvo assemblies, were
+ heard the voices of people who had let themselves be carried away by
+ absurd dreams of the Zemstvo representatives taking part in the affairs of
+ internal administration; let them know that I, devoting all my efforts to
+ the prosperity of the nation, will preserve the principles of autocracy as
+ firmly and unswervingly as my late father of imperishable memory."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These words, pronounced by the young ruler at the commencement of his
+ reign, produced profound disappointment and dissatisfaction in all
+ sections of the educated classes, and from that moment the frondeur spirit
+ began to show itself more openly than at any previous period. In the case
+ of some people of good social position it took the unusual form of
+ speaking disrespectfully of his Majesty. Others supposed that the Emperor
+ had simply repeated words prepared for him by the Minister of the
+ Interior, and this idea spread rapidly, till hostility to the bureaucracy
+ became universal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This feeling reached its climax when the Ministry of the Interior was
+ confided to M. Plehve. His immediate predecessors, though sincere
+ believers in autocracy and very hostile to Liberalism of all kinds,
+ considered that the Liberal ideas might be rendered harmless by firm
+ passive resistance and mild reactionary measures. He, on the contrary,
+ took a more alarmist view of the situation. His appointment coincided with
+ the revival of terrorism, and he believed that autocracy was in danger. To
+ save it, the only means was, in his opinion, a vigorous, repressive police
+ administration, and as he was a man of strong convictions and exceptional
+ energy, he screwed up his system of police supervision to the
+ sticking-point and applied it to the Liberals as well as to the
+ terrorists. In the year 1903, if we may credit information which comes
+ from an apparently trustworthy source, no less than 1,988 political
+ affairs were initiated by the police, and 4,867 persons were condemned
+ inquisitorially to various punishments without any regular trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst this unpopular rigorism was in full force the war unexpectedly
+ broke out, and added greatly to the existing discontent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very few people in Russia had been following closely the recent
+ developments of the Far Eastern Question, and still fewer understood their
+ importance. There seemed to be nothing abnormal in what was taking place.
+ Russia was expanding, and would continue to expand indefinitely, in that
+ direction, without any strenuous effort on her part. Of course the English
+ would try to arrest her progress as usual by diplomatic notes, but their
+ efforts would be as futile as they had been on all previous occasions.
+ They might incite the Japanese to active resistance, but Japan would not
+ commit the insane folly of challenging her giant rival to mortal combat.
+ The whole question could be settled in accordance with Russian interests,
+ as so many similar questions had been settled in the past, by a little
+ skilful diplomacy; and Manchuria could be absorbed, as the contiguous
+ Chinese provinces had been forty years ago, without the necessity of going
+ to war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When these comforting illusions were suddenly destroyed by the rupture of
+ diplomatic relations and the naval attack on Port Arthur, there was an
+ outburst of indignant astonishment. At first the indignation was directed
+ against Japan and England, but it soon turned against the home Government,
+ which had made no adequate preparations for the struggle, and it was
+ intensified by current rumours that the crisis had been wantonly provoked
+ by certain influential personages for purely personal reasons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How far the accounts of the disorders in the military organisation and the
+ rumours about pilfering in high quarters were true, we need not inquire.
+ True or false, they helped greatly to make the war unpopular, and to
+ stimulate the desire for political changes. Under a more liberal and
+ enlightened regime such things were supposed to be impossible, and, as at
+ the time of the Crimean War, public opinion decided that autocracy was
+ being tried, and found wanting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So long as the stern, uncompromising Plehve was at the Ministry of the
+ Interior, enjoying the Emperor's confidence and directing the police
+ administration, public opinion was prudent and reserved in its utterances,
+ but when he was assassinated by a terrorist (July 28th, 1904), and was
+ succeeded by Prince Sviatopolk Mirski, a humane man of Liberal views, the
+ Constitutionalists thought that the time had come for making known their
+ grievances and demands, and for bringing pressure to bear on the Emperor.
+ First came forward the leading members of the Zemstvos. After some
+ preliminary consultation they assembled in St. Petersburg, with the
+ consent of the authorities, in the hope that they would be allowed to
+ discuss publicly the political wants of the country, and prepare the draft
+ of a Constitution. Their wishes were only partially acceded to. They were
+ informed semi-officially that their meetings must be private, but that
+ they might send their resolutions to the Minister of the Interior for
+ transmission to his Majesty. A memorandum was accordingly drawn up and
+ signed on November 21st by 102 out of the 104 representatives present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This hesitating attitude on the part of the Government encouraged other
+ sections of the educated classes to give expression to their long pent-up
+ political aspirations. On the heels of the Zemstvo delegates appeared the
+ barristers, who discussed the existing evils from the juridical point of
+ view, and prescribed what they considered the necessary remedies. Then
+ came municipalities of the large towns, corporations of various kinds,
+ academic leagues, medical faculties, learned societies, and miscellaneous
+ gatherings, all demanding reforms. Great banquets were organised, and very
+ strong speeches, which would have led in Plehve's time to the immediate
+ arrest of the orators, were delivered and published without provoking
+ police intervention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the memorandum presented to the Minister of the Interior by the Zemstvo
+ Congress, and in the resolutions passed by the other corporate bodies, we
+ see reflected the grievances and aspirations of the great majority of the
+ educated classes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The theory propounded in these documents is that a lawless, arbitrary
+ bureaucracy, which seeks to exclude the people from all participation in
+ the management of public affairs, has come between the nation and the
+ Supreme Power, and that it is necessary to eliminate at once this baneful
+ intermediary and inaugurate the so-called "reign of law." For this purpose
+ the petitioners and orators demanded:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (1) Inviolability of person and domicile, so that no one should be
+ troubled by the police without a warrant from an independent magistrate,
+ and no one punished without a regular trial;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (2) Freedom of conscience, of speech, and of the Press, together with the
+ right of holding public meetings and forming associations;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (3) Greater freedom and increased activity of the local self-government,
+ rural and municipal;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (4) An assembly of freely elected representatives, who should participate
+ in the legislative activity and control the administration in all its
+ branches;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (5) The immediate convocation of a constituent assembly, which should
+ frame a Constitution on these lines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of these requirements the last two are considered by far the most
+ important. The truth is that the educated classes have come to be
+ possessed of an ardent desire for genuine parliamentary institutions on a
+ broad, democratic basis, and neither improvements in the bureaucratic
+ organisation, nor even a Zemski Sobor in the sense of a Consultative
+ Assembly, would satisfy them. They imagine that with a full-fledged
+ constitution they would be guaranteed, not only against administrative
+ oppression, but even against military reverses such as they have recently
+ experienced in the Far East&mdash;an opinion in which those who know by
+ experience how military unreadiness and inefficiency can be combined with
+ parliamentary institutions will hardly feel inclined to concur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may surprise English readers to learn that the corruption and venality
+ of the civil and military administration, of which we have recently heard
+ so much, are nowhere mentioned in the complaints and remonstrances; but
+ the fact is easily accounted for. Though corrupt practices undoubtedly
+ exist in some branches of the public service, they are not so universal as
+ is commonly supposed in Western Europe; and the Russian reformers
+ evidently consider that the purifying of the administration is less urgent
+ than the acquisition of political liberties, or that under an enlightened
+ democratic regime the existing abuses would spontaneously disappear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The demands put forward in St. Petersburg did not meet with universal
+ approval in Moscow. There they seemed excessive and un-Russian, and an
+ attempt was made to form a more moderate party. In the ancient Capital of
+ the Tsars even among the Liberals there are not a few who have a
+ sentimental tenderness for the Autocratic Power, and they argue that
+ parliamentary government would be very dangerous in a country which is
+ still far from being homogeneous or compact. To maintain the integrity of
+ the Empire, and to hold the balance equally between the various races and
+ social classes of which the population is composed, it is necessary, they
+ think, to have some permanent authority above the sphere of party spirit
+ and electioneering strife. While admitting that the Government in its
+ present bureaucratic form is unsatisfactory and stands in need of being
+ enlightened by the unofficial classes, they think that a Consultative
+ Assembly on the model of the old Zemski Sobors would be infinitely better
+ suited to Russian wants than a Parliament such as that which sits at
+ Westminster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a whole month the Government took little notice of the unprecedented
+ excitement and demonstrations. It was not till December 25th that a reply
+ was given to the public demands. On that day the Emperor signed an ukaz in
+ which he enumerated the reforms which he considered most urgent, and
+ instructed the Committee of Ministers to prepare the requisite
+ legislation. The list of reforms coincided to a certain extent with the
+ demands formulated by the Zemstvos, but the document as a whole produced
+ profound disappointment, because it contained no mention of a National
+ Assembly. To those who could read between the lines the attitude of the
+ Emperor seemed perfectly clear. He was evidently desirous of introducing
+ very considerable reforms, but he was resolved that they must be effected
+ by the unimpaired Autocratic Power in the old bureaucratic fashion,
+ without any participation of the unofficial world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To obviate any misconception on this point, the Government published,
+ simultaneously with the ukaz, an official communication in which it
+ condemned the agitation and excitement, and warned the Zemstvos,
+ municipalities, and other corporate bodies that in discussing political
+ questions they were overstepping the limits of their legally-defined
+ functions and exposing themselves to the rigours of the law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As might have been foreseen, the ukaz and the circular had not at all the
+ desired effect of "introducing the necessary tranquillity into public
+ life, which has lately been diverted from its normal course." On the
+ contrary, they increased the excitement, and evoked a new series of public
+ demonstrations. On December 27th, the very day on which the two official
+ documents were published&mdash;the Provincial Zemstvo of Moscow, openly
+ disregarding the ministerial warnings, expressed the conviction that the
+ day was near when the bureaucratic regime, which had so long estranged the
+ Supreme Power from the people, would be changed, and when freely-elected
+ representatives of the people would take part in legislation. The same
+ evening, at St. Petersburg, a great Liberal banquet was held, at which a
+ resolution was voted condemning the war, and declaring that Russia could
+ be extricated from her difficulties only by the representatives of the
+ nation, freely elected by secret ballot. As an encouragement to the organs
+ of local administration to persevere in their disregard of ministerial
+ instructions, the St. Petersburg Medical Society, after adopting the
+ programme of the Zemstvo Congress, sent telegrams of congratulation to the
+ Mayor of Moscow and the President of the Tchernigof Zemstvo bureau, both
+ of whom had incurred the displeasure of the Government. A similar telegram
+ was sent by a Congress of 496 engineers to the Moscow Town Council, in
+ which the burning political questions had been freely discussed. In other
+ large towns, when the mayor prevented such discussions, a considerable
+ number of the town councillors resigned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the Zemstvos and municipalities the spirit of opposition spread to
+ the provincial assemblies of the Noblesse. The nobles of the province of
+ St. Petersburg, for example, voted by a large majority an address to the
+ Tsar recommending the convocation of a freely-elected National Assembly;
+ and in Moscow, usually regarded as the fortress of Conservatism, eighty
+ members of the Assembly entered a formal protest against a patriotic
+ Conservative address which had been voted two days before. Even the fair
+ sex considered it necessary to support the opposition movement. The
+ matrons of Moscow, in a humble petition to the Empress, declared that they
+ could not continue to bring up their children properly in the existing
+ state of unconstitutional lawlessness, and their view was endorsed in
+ several provincial towns by the schoolboys, who marched through the
+ streets in procession, and refused to learn their lessons until popular
+ liberties had been granted!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, for more than a month the Government remained silent on the
+ fundamental questions which were exercising the public mind. At last, on
+ the morning of March 3d, appeared an Imperial manifesto of a very
+ unexpected kind. In it the Emperor deplored the outbreak of internal
+ disturbances at a moment when the glorious sons of Russia were fighting
+ with self-sacrificing bravery and offering their lives for the Faith, the
+ Tsar, and the Fatherland; but he drew consolation and hope from
+ remembering that, with the help of the prayers of the Holy Orthodox
+ Church, under the banner of the Tsar's autocratic might, Russia had
+ frequently passed through great wars and internal troubles, and had always
+ issued from them with fresh strength. He appealed, therefore, to all
+ right-minded subjects, to whatever class they might belong, to join him in
+ the great and sacred task of overcoming the stubborn foreign foe, and
+ eradicating revolt at home. As for the manner in which he hoped this might
+ be accomplished, he gave a pretty clear indication, at the end of the
+ document, by praying to God, not only for the welfare of his subjects, but
+ also for "the consolidation of autocracy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This extraordinary pronouncement, couched in semi-ecclesiastical language,
+ produced in the Liberal world feelings of surprise, disappointment, and
+ dismay. No one was more astonished and dismayed than the Ministers, who
+ had known nothing of the manifesto until they saw it in the official
+ Gazette. In the course of the forenoon they paid their usual weekly visit
+ to Tsarskoe Selo, and respectfully submitted to the Emperor that such a
+ document must have a deplorable effect on public opinion. In consequence
+ of their representations his Majesty consented to supplement the manifesto
+ by a rescript to the Minister of the Interior, in which he explained that
+ in carrying out his intentions for the welfare of his people the
+ Government was to have the co-operation of "the experienced elements of
+ the community." Then followed the memorable words: "I am resolved
+ henceforth, with the help of God, to convene the most worthy men,
+ possessing the confidence of the people and elected by them, in order that
+ they may participate in the preparation and consideration of legislative
+ measures." For the carrying out of this resolution a commission, or
+ "special conference," was to be at once convened, under the presidency of
+ M. Bulyghin, the Minister of the Interior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rescript softened the impression produced by the manifesto, but it did
+ not give general satisfaction, because it contained significant
+ indications that the Emperor, while promising to create an assembly of
+ some kind, was still determined to maintain the Autocratic Power. So at
+ least the public interpreted a vague phase about the difficulty of
+ introducing reforms "while preserving absolutely the immutability of the
+ fundamental laws of the Empire." And this impression seemed to be
+ confirmed by the fact that the task of preparing the future representative
+ institutions was confided, not to a constituent assembly, but to a small
+ commission composed chiefly or entirely of officials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In these circumstances the Liberals determined to continue the agitation.
+ The Bulyghin Commission was accordingly inundated with petitions and
+ addresses explaining the wants of the nation in general, and of various
+ sections of it in particular; and when the Minister declined to receive
+ deputations and discuss with them the aforesaid wants, the reform question
+ was taken up by a new series of congresses, composed of doctors, lawyers,
+ professors, journalists, etc. Even the higher ecclesiastical dignitaries
+ woke up for a moment from their accustomed lethargy, remembered how they
+ had lived for so many years under the rod of M. Pobedonostsef, recognised
+ as uncanonical such subordination to a layman, and petitioned for the
+ resurrection of the Patriarchate, which had been abolished by Peter the
+ Great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On May 9th a new Zemstvo Congress was held in Moscow, and it at once
+ showed that since their November session in St. Petersburg the delegates
+ had made a decided movement to the Left. Those of them who had then led
+ the movement were now regarded as too Conservative. The idea of a Zemski
+ Sobor was discarded as insufficient for the necessities of the situation,
+ and strong speeches were made in support of a much more democratic
+ constitution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was thus becoming clearer every day that between the Liberals and the
+ Government there was an essential difference which could not be removed by
+ ordinary concessions. The Emperor proved that he was in favour of reform
+ by granting a very large measure of religious toleration, by removing some
+ of the disabilities imposed on the Poles, and allowing the Polish language
+ to be used in schools, and by confirming the proposals of the Committee of
+ Ministers to place the Press censure on a legal basis. But these
+ concessions to public opinion did not gain for him the sympathy and
+ support of his Liberal subjects. What they insisted on was a considerable
+ limitation of the Autocratic Power; and on that point the Emperor has
+ hitherto shown himself inexorable. His firmness proceeds not from any
+ wayward desire to be able to do as he pleases, but from a hereditary
+ respect for a principle. From his boyhood he has been taught that Russia
+ owes her greatness and her security to her autocratic form of government,
+ and that it is the sacred duty of the Tsar to hand down intact to his
+ successors the power which he holds in trust for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the Liberals were thus striving to attain their object without
+ popular disorders, and without any very serious infraction of the law,
+ Revolutionaries were likewise busy, working on different but parallel
+ lines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the chapter on the present phase of the revolutionary movement I have
+ sketched briefly the origin and character of the two main Socialist
+ groups, and I have now merely to convey a general idea of their attitude
+ during recent events. And first, of the Social Democrats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of 1894 the Social Democrats were in what may be called their
+ normal condition&mdash;that is to say, they were occupied in organising
+ and developing the Labour Movement. The removal of Plehve, who had greatly
+ hampered them by his energetic police administration, enabled them to work
+ more freely, and they looked with a friendly eye on the efforts of the
+ Liberal Zemstvo-ists; but they took no part in the agitation, because the
+ Zemstvo world lay outside their sphere of action. In the labour world, to
+ which they confined their attention, they must have foreseen that a crisis
+ would sooner or later be produced by the war, and that they would then
+ have an excellent opportunity of preaching their doctrine that for all the
+ sufferings of the working classes the Government is responsible. What they
+ did not foresee was that serious labour troubles were so near at hand, and
+ that the conflict with the authorities would be accelerated by Father
+ Gapon. Accustomed to regard him as a persistent opponent, they did not
+ expect him to become suddenly an energetic, self-willed ally. Hence they
+ were taken unawares, and at first the direction of the movement was by no
+ means entirely in their hands. Very soon, however, they grasped the
+ situation, and utilised it for their own ends. It was in great measure due
+ to their secret organisation and activity that the strike in the Putilof
+ Ironworks, which might easily have been terminated amicably, spread
+ rapidly not only to the other works and factories in St. Petersburg, but
+ also to those of Moscow, Riga, Warsaw, Lodz, and other industrial centres.
+ Though they did not approve of Father Gapon's idea of presenting a
+ petition to the Tsar, the loss of life which his demonstration occasioned
+ was very useful to them in their efforts to propagate the belief that the
+ Autocratic Power is the ally of the capitalists and hostile to the claims
+ and aspirations of the working classes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other great Socialist group contributed much more largely towards
+ bringing about the present state of things. It was their Militant
+ Organisation that assassinated Plehve, and thereby roused the Liberals to
+ action. To them, likewise, is due the subsequent assassination of the
+ Grand Duke Serge, and it is an open secret that they are preparing other
+ acts of terrorism of a similar kind. At the same time they have been very
+ active in creating provincial revolutionary committees, in printing and
+ distributing revolutionary literature, and, above all, in organising
+ agrarian disturbances, which they intend to make a very important factor
+ in the development of events. Indeed, it is chiefly by agrarian
+ disturbances that they hope to overthrow the Autocratic Power and bring
+ about the great economic and social revolution to which the political
+ revolution would be merely the prologue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therein lies a serious danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the failure of the propaganda and the insurrectionary agitation in
+ the seventies, it became customary in revolutionary circles to regard the
+ muzhik as impervious to Socialist ideas and insurrectionary excitement,
+ but the hope of eventually employing him in the cause never quite died
+ out, and in recent times, when his economic condition in many districts
+ has become critical, attempts have occasionally been made to embarrass the
+ Government by agrarian disturbances. The method usually employed is to
+ disseminate among the peasantry by oral propaganda, by printed or
+ hectographed leaflets, and by forged Imperial manifestoes, the belief that
+ the Tsar has ordered the land of the proprietors to be given to the rural
+ Communes, and that his benevolent wishes are being frustrated by the
+ land-owners and the officials. The forged manifesto is sometimes written
+ in letters of gold as a proof of its being genuine, and in one case which
+ I heard of in the province of Poltava, the revolutionary agent, wearing
+ the uniform of an aide-de-camp of the Emperor, induced the village priest
+ to read the document in the parish church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The danger lies in the fact that, quite independent of revolutionary
+ activity, there has always been, since the time of the Emancipation, a
+ widespread belief among the peasantry that they would sooner or later
+ receive the whole of the land. Successive Tsars have tried personally to
+ destroy this illusion, but their efforts have not been successful.
+ Alexander II., when passing through a province where the idea was very
+ prevalent, caused a number of village elders to be brought before him, and
+ told them in a threatening tone that they must remain satisfied with their
+ allotments and pay their taxes regularly; but the wily peasants could not
+ be convinced that the "General" who had talked to them in this sense was
+ really the Tsar. Alexander III. made a similar attempt at the time of his
+ accession. To the Volost elders collected together from all parts of the
+ Empire, he said: "Do not believe the foolish rumours and absurd reports
+ about a redistribution of the land, and addition to your allotments, and
+ such like things. These reports are disseminated by your enemies. Every
+ kind of property, your own included, must be inviolable." Recalling these
+ words, Nicholas II. confirmed them at his accession, and warned the
+ peasants not to be led astray by evil-disposed persons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding these repeated warnings, the peasants still cling to the
+ idea that all the land belongs to them; and the Socialist-Revolutionaries
+ now announce publicly that they intend to use this belief for the purpose
+ of carrying out their revolutionary designs. In a pamphlet entitled
+ "Concerning Liberty and the Means of Obtaining it," they explain their
+ plan of campaign. Under the guidance of the revolutionary agents the
+ peasants of each district all over the Empire are to make it impossible
+ for the proprietors to work their estates, and then, after driving away
+ the local authorities and rural police, they are to take possession of the
+ estates for their own use. The Government, in its vain attempts to
+ dislodge them, will have to employ all the troops at its disposal, and
+ this will give the working classes of the towns, led by the
+ revolutionists, an opportunity of destroying the most essential parts of
+ the administrative mechanism. Thus a great social revolution can be
+ successfully accomplished, and any Zemski Sobor or Parliament which may be
+ convoked will merely have to give a legislative sanction to accomplished
+ facts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These three groups&mdash;the Liberals, the Social Democrats, and the
+ Socialist Revolutionaries&mdash;constitute what may be called the purely
+ Russian Opposition. They found their claims and justify their action on
+ utilitarian and philosophic grounds, and demand liberty (in various
+ senses) for themselves and others, independently of race and creed. This
+ distinguishes them from the fourth group, who claim to represent the
+ subject-nationalities, and who mingle nationalist feelings and aspirations
+ with enthusiasm for liberty and justice in the abstract.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The policy of Russifying these subject-nationalities, which was
+ inaugurated by Alexander III. and maintained by his successor, has failed
+ in its object. It has increased the use of the Russian language in
+ official procedure, modified the system of instruction in the schools and
+ universities, and brought, nominally, a few schismatic and heretical sheep
+ into the Eastern Orthodox fold, but it has entirely failed to inspire the
+ subject-populations with Russian feeling and national patriotism; on the
+ contrary, it has aroused in them a bitter hostility to Russian
+ nationality, and to the Central Government. In such of them as have
+ retained their old aspirations of political independence&mdash;notably the
+ Poles&mdash;the semi-latent disaffection has been stimulated; and in those
+ of them which, like the Finlanders and the Armenians, desire merely to
+ preserve the limited autonomy they formerly enjoyed, a sentiment of
+ disaffection has been created. All of them know very well that in an armed
+ struggle with the dominant Russian nationality they would speedily be
+ crushed, as the Poles were in 1863. Their disaffection shows itself,
+ therefore, merely in resistance to the obligatory military service, and in
+ an undisguised or thinly veiled attitude of systematic hostility, which
+ causes the Government some anxiety and prevents it from sending to the Far
+ East a large number of troops which would otherwise be available. They
+ hail, however, with delight the Liberal and revolutionary movements in the
+ hope that the Russians themselves may undermine, and possibly overthrow,
+ the tyrannical Autocratic Power. Towards this end they would gladly
+ co-operate, and they are endeavouring, therefore, to get into touch with
+ each other; but they have so little in common, and so many mutually
+ antagonistic interests, that they are not likely to succeed in forming a
+ solid coalition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While sympathising with every form of opposition to the Government, the
+ men of the subject-nationalities reserve their special affection for the
+ Socialists, because these not only proclaim, like the Liberals, the
+ principles of extensive local self-government and universal equality
+ before the law, but they also speak of replacing the existing system of
+ coercive centralisation by a voluntary confederation of heterogeneous
+ units. This explains why so many Poles, Armenians and Georgians are to be
+ found in the ranks of the Social Democrats and the
+ Socialist-Revolutionaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the recruits from oppressed nationalities the great majority come from
+ the Jews, who, though they have never dreamed of political independence,
+ or even of local autonomy, have most reason to complain of the existing
+ order of things. At all times they have furnished a goodly contingent to
+ the revolutionary movement, and many of them have belied their traditional
+ reputation of timidity and cowardice by taking part in very dangerous
+ terrorist enterprises&mdash;in some cases ending their career on the
+ scaffold. In 1897 they created a Social-Democratic organisation of their
+ own, commonly known as the Bund, which joined, in 1898, the Russian
+ Social-Democratic Labour Party, on the understanding that it should retain
+ its independence on all matters affecting exclusively the Jewish
+ population.* It now possesses a very ably-conducted weekly organ, and of
+ all sections of the Social-Democratic group it is unquestionably the best
+ organised. This is not surprising, because the Jews have more business
+ capacity than the Russians, and centuries of oppression have developed in
+ the race a wonderful talent for secret illegal activity, and for eluding
+ the vigilance of the police.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The official title of this Bund is the "Universal Jewish
+ Labour Union in Russia and Poland." Its organ is called
+ Sovremenniya Izvestiya (Contemporary News).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It would be very interesting to know the numerical strength of these
+ groups, but we have no materials for forming even an approximate estimate.
+ The Liberals are certainly the most numerous. They include the great
+ majority of the educated classes, but they are less persistently energetic
+ than their rivals, and their methods of action make less impression on the
+ Government. The two Socialist groups, though communicative enough with
+ regard to their doctrines and aims, are very reticent with regard to the
+ number of their adherents, and this naturally awakens a suspicion that an
+ authoritative statement on the subject would tend to diminish rather than
+ enhance their importance in the eyes of the public. If statistics of the
+ Social Democrats could be obtained, it would be necessary to distinguish
+ between the three categories of which the group is composed: (1) The
+ educated active members, who form the directing, controlling element; (2)
+ the fully indoctrinated recruits from the working classes; and (3) workmen
+ who desire merely to better their material condition, but who take part in
+ political demonstrations in the hope of bringing pressure to bear on their
+ employers, and inducing the Government to intervene on their behalf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two Socialist groups are not only increasing the number of their
+ adherents; they are also extending and improving their organisation, as is
+ proved by the recent strikes, which are the work of the Social Democrats,
+ and by the increasing rural disturbances and acts of terrorism, which are
+ the work of the Socialist-Revolutionaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the unorganised Nationalist group, all I can do towards
+ conveying a vague, general idea of its numerical strength is to give the
+ numbers of the populations&mdash;men, women, and children&mdash;of which
+ the Nationalist agitators are the self-constituted representatives,
+ without attempting to estimate the percentage of the actively disaffected.
+ The populations in question are:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Poles 7,900,000
+ Jews 5,190,000
+ Finlanders 2,592,000
+ Armenians 1,200,000
+ Georgians 408,000
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; 16,495,000
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ If a National Assembly were created, in which all the nationalities were
+ represented according to the numbers of the population, the Poles, roughly
+ speaking, would have 38 members, the Jews 24, the Finlanders 12, the
+ Armenians 6, and the Georgians 2: whereas the Russians would have about
+ 400. The other subject-nationalities in which symptoms of revolutionary
+ fermentation have appeared are too insignificant to require special
+ mention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the representatives of the various subject-nationalities are
+ endeavouring to combine, so likewise are the Liberals and the two
+ Socialist groups trying to form a coalition, and for this purpose they
+ have already held several conferences. How far they will succeed it is
+ impossible to say. On one point&mdash;the necessity of limiting or
+ abolishing the Autocratic Power&mdash;they are unanimous, and there seems
+ to be a tacit understanding that for the present they shall work together
+ amicably on parallel lines, each group reserving its freedom of action for
+ the future, and using meanwhile its own customary means of putting
+ pressure on the Government. We may expect, therefore, that for a time the
+ Liberals will go on holding conferences and congresses in defiance of the
+ police authorities, delivering eloquent speeches, discussing thorny
+ political questions, drafting elaborate constitutions, and making gentle
+ efforts to clog the wheels of the Administration,* while the Social
+ Democrats will continue to organise strikes and semi-pacific
+ demonstrations,** and the Socialist-Revolutionaries will seek to
+ accelerate the march of events by agrarian disturbances and acts of
+ terrorism.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * As an illustration of this I may cite the fact that
+ several Zemstvos have declared themselves unable, under
+ present conditions, to support the indigent families of
+ soldiers at the front.
+
+ ** I call them semi-pacific, because on such occasions the
+ demonstrators are instructed to refrain from violence only
+ so long as the police do not attempt to stop the proceedings
+ by force.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It is certain, however, that the parting of the ways will be reached
+ sooner or later, and already there are indications that it is not very far
+ off. Liberals and Social Democrats may perhaps work together for a
+ considerable time, because the latter, though publicly committed to
+ socialistic schemes which the Liberals must regard with the strongest
+ antipathy, are willing to accept a Constitutional regime during the period
+ of transition. It is difficult, however, to imagine that the Liberals, of
+ whom a large proportion are landed proprietors, can long go hand in hand
+ with the Socialist-Revolutionaries, who propose to bring about the
+ revolution by inciting the peasants to seize unceremoniously the estates,
+ live stock, and agricultural implements of the landlords.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Already the Socialist-Revolutionaries have begun to speak publicly of the
+ inevitable rupture in terms by no means flattering to their temporary
+ allies. In a brochure recently issued by their central committee the
+ following passage occurs:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If we consider the matter seriously and attentively, it becomes evident
+ that all the strength of the bourgeoisie lies in its greater or less
+ capacity for frightening and intimidating the Government by the fear of a
+ popular rising; but as the bourgeoisie itself stands in mortal terror of
+ the thing with which it frightens the Government, its position at the
+ moment of insurrection will be rather ridiculous and pitiable."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To understand the significance of this passage, the reader must know that,
+ in the language of the Socialists, bourgeoisie and Liberals are
+ convertible terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The truth is that the Liberals find themselves in an awkward strategical
+ position. As quiet, respectable members of society they dislike violence
+ of every kind, and occasionally in moments of excitement they believe that
+ they may attain their ends by mere moral pressure, but when they find that
+ academic protests and pacific demonstrations make no perceptible
+ impression on the Government, they become impatient and feel tempted to
+ approve, at least tacitly, of stronger measures. Many of them do not
+ profess to regard with horror and indignation the acts of the terrorists,
+ and some of them, if I am correctly informed, go so far as to subscribe to
+ the funds of the Socialist-Revolutionaries without taking very stringent
+ precautions against the danger of the money being employed for the
+ preparation of dynamite and hand grenades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This extraordinary conduct on the part of moderate Liberals may well
+ surprise Englishmen, but it is easily explained. The Russians have a
+ strong vein of recklessness in their character, and many of them are at
+ present imbued with an unquestioning faith in the miracle-working power of
+ Constitutionalism. These seem to imagine that as soon as the Autocratic
+ Power is limited by parliamentary institutions the discontented will cease
+ from troubling and the country will be at rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is hardly necessary to say that such expectations are not likely to be
+ realised. All sections of the educated classes may be agreed in desiring
+ "liberty," but the word has many meanings, and nowhere more than in Russia
+ at the present day. For the Liberals it means simply democratic
+ parliamentary government; for the Social Democrat it means the undisputed
+ predominance of the Proletariat; for the Socialist-Revolutionary it means
+ the opportunity of realising immediately the Socialist ideal; for the
+ representative of a subject-nationality it means the abolition of racial
+ and religious disabilities and the attainment of local autonomy or
+ political independence. There is no doubt, therefore, that in Russia, as
+ in other countries, a parliament would develop political parties bitterly
+ hostile to each other, and its early history might contain some startling
+ surprises for those who had helped to create it. If the Constitution, for
+ example, were made as democratic as the Liberals and Socialists demand,
+ the elections might possibly result in an overwhelming Conservative
+ majority ready to re-establish the Autocratic Power! This is not at all so
+ absurd as it sounds, for the peasants, apart from the land question, are
+ thoroughly Conservative. The ordinary muzhik can hardly conceive that the
+ Emperor's power can be limited by a law or an Assembly, and if the idea
+ were suggested to him, he would certainly not approve. In his opinion the
+ Tsar should be omnipotent. If everything is not satisfactory in Russia, it
+ is because the Tsar does not know of the evil, or is prevented from curing
+ it by the tchinovniks and the landed proprietors. "More power, therefore,
+ to his elbow!" as an Irishman might say. Such is the simple political
+ creed of the "undeveloped" muzhik, and all the efforts of the
+ revolutionary groups to develop him have not yet been attended with much
+ success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How, then, the reader may ask, is an issue to be found out of the present
+ imbroglio? I cannot pretend to speak with authority, but it seems to me
+ that there are only two methods of dealing with the situation: prompt,
+ energetic repression, or timely, judicious concessions to popular feeling.
+ Either of these methods might, perhaps, have been successful, but the
+ Government adopted neither, and has halted between the two. By this policy
+ of drift it has encouraged the hopes of all, has satisfied nobody, and has
+ diminished its own prestige.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In defence or extenuation of this attitude it may be said that there is
+ considerable danger in the adoption of either course. Vigorous repression
+ means staking all on a single card, and if it were successful it could not
+ do more than postpone the evil day, because the present antiquated form of
+ government&mdash;suitable enough, perhaps, for a simply organised
+ peasant-empire vegetating in an atmosphere of "eternal stillness"&mdash;cannot
+ permanently resist the rising tide of modern ideas and aspirations, and is
+ incapable of grappling successfully with the complicated problems of
+ economic and social progress which are already awaiting solution. Sooner
+ or later the bureaucratic machine, driven solely by the Autocratic Power
+ in the teeth of popular apathy or opposition, must inevitably break down,
+ and the longer the collapse is postponed the more violent is it likely to
+ be. On the other hand, it is impossible to foresee the effects of
+ concessions. Mere bureaucratic reforms will satisfy no one; they are
+ indeed not wanted except as a result of more radical changes. What all
+ sections of the Opposition demand is that the people should at least take
+ part in the government of the country by means of freely elected
+ representatives in Parliament assembled. It is useless to argue with them
+ that Constitutionalism will certainly not work the miracles that are
+ expected of it, and that in the struggles of political parties which it is
+ sure to produce the unity and integrity of the Empire may be endangered.
+ Lessons of that kind can only be learned by experience. Other countries,
+ it is said, have existed and thriven under free political institutions,
+ and why not Russia? Why should she be a pariah among the nations? She gave
+ parliamentary institutions to the young nationalities of the Balkan
+ Peninsula as soon as they were liberated from Turkish bondage, and she has
+ not yet been allowed such privileges herself!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us suppose now that the Autocratic Power has come to feel the
+ impossibility of remaining isolated as it is at present, and that it has
+ decided to seek solid support in some section of the population, what
+ section should it choose? Practically it has no choice. The only way of
+ relieving the pressure is to make concessions to the Constitutionalists.
+ That course would conciliate, not merely the section of the Opposition
+ which calls itself by that name and represents the majority of the
+ educated classes, but also, in a lesser degree, all the other sections. No
+ doubt these latter would accept the concession only as part payment of
+ their demands and a means of attaining ulterior aims. Again and again the
+ Social Democrats have proclaimed publicly that they desire parliamentary
+ government, not as an end in itself, but as a stepping stone towards the
+ realisation of the Socialist ideal. It is evident, however, that they
+ would have to remain on this stepping stone for a long series of years&mdash;until
+ the representatives of the Proletariat obtained an overwhelming majority
+ in the Chamber. In like manner the subject-nationalities would regard a
+ parliamentary regime as a mere temporary expedient&mdash;a means of
+ attaining greater local and national autonomy&mdash;and they would
+ probably show themselves more impatient than the Social Democrats. Any
+ inordinate claims, however, which they might put forward would encounter
+ resistance, as the Poles found in 1863, not merely from the Autocratic
+ Power, but from the great majority of the Russian people, who have no
+ sympathy with any efforts tending to bring about the disruption of the
+ Empire. In short, as soon as the Assembly set to work, the delegates would
+ be sobered by a consciousness of responsibility, differences of opinion
+ and aims would inevitably appear, and the various groups transformed into
+ political parties, instead of all endeavouring as at present to pull down
+ the Autocratic Power, would expend a great part of their energy in pulling
+ against each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to reach this haven of safety it is necessary to pass through a
+ period of transition, in which there are some formidable difficulties. One
+ of these I may mention by way of illustration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In creating parliamentary institutions of any kind the Government could
+ hardly leave intact the present system of allowing the police to arrest
+ without a proper warrant, and send into exile without trial, any one
+ suspected of revolutionary designs. On this point all the Opposition
+ groups are agreed, and all consequently put forward prominently the demand
+ for the inviolability of person and domicile. To grant such a concession
+ seems a very simple and easy matter, but any responsible minister might
+ hesitate to accept such a restriction of his authority. We know, he would
+ argue, that the terrorist section of the Socialist-Revolutionary group,
+ the so-called Militant Organisation, are very busy preparing bombs, and
+ the police, even with the extensive, ill-defined powers which they at
+ present possess, have the greatest difficulty in preventing the use of
+ such objectionable instruments of political warfare. Would not the
+ dynamiters and throwers of hand-grenades utilise a relaxation of police
+ supervision, as they did in the time of Louis Melikof,* for carrying out
+ their nefarious designs?
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Vide supra, p. 569.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I have no desire to conceal or minimise such dangers, but I believe they
+ are temporary and by no means so great as the dangers of the only other
+ alternatives&mdash;energetic repression and listless inactivity. Terrorism
+ and similar objectionable methods of political warfare are symptoms of an
+ abnormal, unhealthy state of society, and would doubtless disappear in
+ Russia, as they have disappeared in other countries, with the conditions
+ which produced them. If the terrorists continued to exist under a more
+ liberal regime, they would be much less formidable, because they would
+ lose the half-concealed sympathy which they at present enjoy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Political assassinations may occasionally take place under the most
+ democratic governments, as the history of the United States proves, but
+ terrorism as a system is to be found only in countries where the political
+ power is concentrated in the hands of a few individuals; and it sometimes
+ happens that irresponsible persons are exposed to terrorist attacks. We
+ have an instance of this at present in St. Petersburg. The reluctance of
+ the Emperor to adopt at once a Liberal programme is commonly attributed to
+ the influence of two members of the Imperial family, the Empress Dowager
+ and the Grand Duke Vladimir. This is a mistake. Neither of these
+ personages is so reactionary as is generally supposed, and their political
+ views, whatever they may be, have no appreciable influence on the course
+ of affairs. If the Empress Dowager had possessed the influence so often
+ ascribed to her, M. Plehve would not have remained so long in power. As
+ for the Grand Duke Vladimir, he is not in favour, and for nearly two years
+ he has never been consulted on political matters. The so-called Grand
+ Ducal party of which he is supposed to be the leader, is a recently
+ invented fiction. When in difficulties the Emperor may consult
+ individually some of his near relatives, but there is no coherent group to
+ which the term party could properly be applied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the Autocratic Power has decided on a definite line of action,
+ it is to be hoped that a strong man will be found to take the direction of
+ affairs. In Russia, as in other autocratically governed countries, strong
+ men in the political sense of the term are extremely rare, and when they
+ do appear as a lusus naturae they generally take their colour from their
+ surroundings, and are of the authoritative, dictatorial type. During
+ recent years only two strong men have come to the front in the Russian
+ official world. The one was M. Plehve, who was nothing if not
+ authoritative and dictatorial, and who is no longer available for
+ experiments in repression or constitutionalism. The other is M. Witte. As
+ an administrator under an autocratic regime he has displayed immense
+ ability and energy, but it does not follow that he is a statesman capable
+ of piloting the ship into calm waters, and he is not likely to have an
+ opportunity of making the attempt, for he does not&mdash;to state the case
+ mildly&mdash;possess the full confidence of his august master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even if a strong man, enjoying fully the Imperial confidence, could be
+ found, the problem would not be thereby completely and satisfactorily
+ solved, because an autocrat, who is the Lord's Anointed, cannot delegate
+ his authority to a simple mortal without losing something of the
+ semi-religious halo and the prestige on which his authority rests. While a
+ roi faineant may fulfil effectively all the essential duties of
+ sovereignty, an autocrate faineant is an absurdity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In these circumstances, it is idle to speculate as to the future. All we
+ can do is to await patiently the development of events, and in all
+ probability it is the unexpected that will happen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader doubtless feels that I am offering a very lame and impotent
+ conclusion, and I must confess that I am conscious of this feeling myself,
+ but I think I may fairly plead extenuating circumstances. Happily for my
+ peace of mind I am a mere observer who is not called upon to invent a
+ means of extricating Russia from her difficult position. For that arduous
+ task there are already brave volunteers enough in the field. All I have to
+ do is to explain as clearly as I can the complicated problem to be solved.
+ Nor do I feel it any part of my duty to make predictions. I believe I am
+ pretty well acquainted with the situation at the present moment, but what
+ it may be a few weeks hence, when the words I am now writing issue from
+ the press, I do not profess to foresee.
+ </p>
+
+<div style='display:block;margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RUSSIA ***</div>
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