登陆注册
15687700000261

第261章 CHAPTER XXXIV(5)

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.

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.

"You have not been long absent--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--the distinguishing mark of the students' uniform--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 he 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."**

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.

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.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 点亮心灯照亮世界

    点亮心灯照亮世界

    点亮一盏心灯,照亮整个世界。点亮一盏心灯,照亮整个世界。点亮一盏心灯,照亮整个世界。点亮一盏心灯,照亮整个世界。点亮一盏心灯,照亮整个世界。
  • 三国之一统太阳系

    三国之一统太阳系

    219年,曹丕穿越,因为穿越带来的四次元力量扭动了一颗陨石,砸在了吕蒙大营中,也把蜀汉天命论给砸到了顶峰。当我被孙刘联军围困在邺城时,司马懿只是淡淡两字:“投降。”当我像狗一样没半点脾气投降后,曹彰又带着曹家旧部,讨伐我这个“曹家的耻辱,亡国奴”我是常败将军,打不过刘备,曹彰兵临城下,我打腿了他,丢下六千具尸体,我清点军营,死了快三万人了。我也不会发明创造,但是,这个世界,有那么点不寻常,其实别的都好,只是——中国是三国,俄国是列宁时代,乱世交集,而中国恰好是少数几个连火枪都没有的国家。我所倚仗的,只有我一身的阴谋。
  • 灭世神主

    灭世神主

    家族的衰败,是什么原因?家族的毁灭。始作俑者究竟是谁?师门的灭亡,到底是什么势力所为?爷爷的严重受伤,几近死亡,凶手又是谁?种种迷惑,王宇是否能解开?亲人的仇,是否能报?既然天要灭我,那我就逆天!世要亡我,我定灭世!
  • 经营之王

    经营之王

    会做饭的孩子,不会过得太苦!只要吃好睡好,就是过得好!
  • 娶一送一:权少的头号甜妻

    娶一送一:权少的头号甜妻

    毕业宴上,她成了黑暗里交易的羊羔,却殊不知阴差阳错下,借了某个大人物的一条小蝌蚪。未婚带球,她冠上了伤风败俗的头冠,成为上流圈里的笑柄,后母继妹纷纷下手赶她出门。四年后,她携子女归来,只想凭自己守住这一方净土,却不料,仇家相继登场,连带着的还有那个喜当爹的男人……
  • 幽梦奇灵

    幽梦奇灵

    悠悠千年的羁绊化作延绵万年的忧伤,融入五百年的恩怨,将幻化出怎样离奇而又浪漫的神话故事?故事从江城古月,到紫云仙宫,从承渊之谷到阆风之巅,从幻象琉璃琴到烛龙之心,从玄甲灵牌到岁月矛,从青玉子到黑水玄蛇,从古龙夔到蓝色骏马,古月兰心将演绎出怎样多彩玄幻的传奇之旅.....
  • 自我人生养成计划

    自我人生养成计划

    曾经想养成很多东西,但如今却只能先养成自己。
  • 最流行的管理寓言

    最流行的管理寓言

    本书中含现代经理人不可不知的124个流行管理寓言,智慧尽在本书中隐藏,全书分为七编,有战略·决策·变革、员工·团队·制度、选人·用人·育人、激励·授权·沟通、计划·执行·成效、竞争·危机·创新、领导·品质·技能。快快买回家收藏吧!
  • 滑稽世界

    滑稽世界

    滑稽时代,滑稽世界,滑稽滑稽般诞生,滑稽的改变世界,为这世界带来了滑稽,更带来了善良、和平与美好。只是滑稽,确实滑稽!
  • 九生情缘:前尘如梦

    九生情缘:前尘如梦

    一次偶然的机遇,一封来自地狱的信,一场旷世绝伦的穿越,一段剪不断理还乱的情。