登陆注册
15687700000213

第213章 CHAPTER XXIX(7)

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.*

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.

When the Commission had finished its labours, its proposals passed to the two higher instances--the Committee for Peasant Affairs and the Council of State--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.

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.

The three fundamental principles laid down by the law were:--

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.

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.

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.

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.

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--about half of all the arable land possessed by the proprietors.

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.

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--that of historical right and that of material advantage; and from both of these the Emancipation Law seemed to him very unsatisfactory.

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"--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.*

See preceding chapter.

同类推荐
  • 菩萨优婆塞五戒威仪经

    菩萨优婆塞五戒威仪经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 救命书

    救命书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 优婆夷志

    优婆夷志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 客滇述

    客滇述

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Coral Reefs

    Coral Reefs

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 我是包租公

    我是包租公

    一个包租公,一个武林高手,一个商界奇才,温柔乡,英雄冢,且看他们如何在这个现实的社会打拼自己的梦想,找寻自己的爱情。
  • 两界缘由

    两界缘由

    天地之间有大隐秘:传闻上古之时,凡俗亦可撼天,三皇五帝,虽为蝼蚁,可以驱神,今朝世人,终归了了一生,不能惊天动地,前人之能,后辈坤龙,以三世之身,成无上之躯,追溯上古之谜,一界成,一界亡,两界之缘由,留待后人评说。群号:372765985
  • 梦幻星空之男配逆袭

    梦幻星空之男配逆袭

    凭什么女主角总给那些伤害她千万次的男主,而守护付出良多的男配却总是要一个人默默承受。这一点也不公平,男主有什么好的,为什么无论他怎么伤害女主,女主都对他爱意颇多。但是无论男配怎么付出,以至于付出生命,女主也不会爱上他。这是为什么?“因为他是男配!”男配怎么了,男配也可以打败男主成为主角!!!不要女主和男主在一起,我要把所有的女主都送给深爱着她的男配。打败男主,男配逆袭抢占女主了哦!
  • 女人要懂点创意心理学

    女人要懂点创意心理学

    女人的生活不能一成不变,要充满惊喜和精彩;女人的事业不要原地踏步,要不断突破和进步;女人的装扮和家居设计不要数十年如一日,要能展现出独特的个性与风格……而这一切都需要创意,创意是一种来自于心灵的力量。本书利用诸多心理学方面的知识来帮助女人寻求一种创意生活,让女人们用创意摆脱一成不变的生活,拉近梦想与现实间的距离,同时引导女人们利用自身的天然优势来提升创造力,从而给自己也给他人的生活制造更多的新鲜和惊喜,让生活变得更加美妙,让前途变得更加美好。
  • 大灭绝重生之虎鲨传奇

    大灭绝重生之虎鲨传奇

    2025年,黄石超级火山爆发,拉开了地球第六次生物大灭绝时代的戏幕......大灭绝中求生存,必须得拼尽全力,在险境中寻找出路.在险象环生的海洋,与凶猛的虎鲸斗,与庞大的深海大乌贼斗,与三十五米长的大蓝鲸斗......还有大灭绝中存活的人类,在海底未知区域存活的远古巨兽......这个时代,无不是活在惊险刺激中。然而,这里还有着奇妙的海中风情,还有着失落的亚特兰蒂斯......PS:美人鱼和蓝鲸妹妹,主角该选哪一个?(主角不会成鱼人)再PS:蓝鲸妹妹重生前是个漂亮的妹妹。好了,先暂时不选了,海啸来了,各位道友,来吧,一起冲浪去......
  • 天明武神

    天明武神

    李天明大吼“吃我一记武神奥义!”敌人临死之前问“武神是谁?”李天明“就是我。”站在山顶巅峰,李天明大吼一声“我李天明天下无敌!!”一股气势节节攀升,恐怖如斯!吉安娜轻飘飘问一句“你刚刚说什么?”李天明赔笑说:“我刚刚说李天明天下第二,武道第一。嘿嘿嘿……”
  • 惡女戀愛史

    惡女戀愛史

    开始的我们手牵着手暂停的我们肩靠着肩结束的我们背靠着背最寂寞的季节最寒冷的夜无助的我们该如何把握着该如何完美落幕...微笑的你宛如天使沉默的你貌似诗人冷漠的你神似恶魔最后的恋人最铭心的你被遗忘的我该怎样走出阴霍该怎样学会结束...
  • 宠婚:BOSS撩上身

    宠婚:BOSS撩上身

    她是娱乐圈中的绯闻女主,丑闻满天飞,算计了无数的男人,她一心往上爬。为此不惜得罪他的情人白露。最后报应来了,遭遇他的封杀。他说,“你不穿衣服被我丢出去,保你上更大的头条,也足以让你火上三两年了!”“要火一起火,我要抱着你一起火。”她无所畏惧,反正绯闻主角是他。结果绯闻男主不露脸,只露她的脸。恶男如此可恶,她就要偷着他的心,让他滚下床!
  • 花落年华

    花落年华

    这个世界太多路人了,所以我更习惯走胡同,因为人少,但是胡同越走越窄,往往还是死胡同,所以只能靠边走马路,把中间让给浩浩荡荡的路人,但是在路边经常掉进下水道里,或者侥幸逃过井盖却不留神撞在了树上。于是,我懂了,好好走自己的路,一个劲的看别人,弄不好就摔了。花落年华,我们,最后都学会了放手。
  • 江湖梦断,且试河山:冷月倾城

    江湖梦断,且试河山:冷月倾城

    每个男人的心中,都有一个江湖梦;每个女人的梦里,都有一段宫廷情。江湖梦已断,宫廷情未了,兄弟,叔侄,谁最终能赢得她的芳心?金戈铁马,万里沙场,谁又能和她并肩,笑看那无限风光?