The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 10, No. 61, November, 1862 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 10, No. 61, November, 1862.

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 10, No. 61, November, 1862 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 10, No. 61, November, 1862.

The serfs, when standing for great ideas, will die rather than yield.  The first Napoleon learned this at Eylau,—­the third Napoleon learned it at Sevastopol; yet in daily life they are slavish beyond belief.  On a certain day in the year 1855, the most embarrassed man in all the Russias was, doubtless, our excellent American Minister.  The serf-coachman employed at wages was called up to receive his discharge for drunkenness.  Coming into the presence of a sound-hearted American democrat, who had never dreamed of one mortal kneeling to another, Ivan throws himself on his knees, presses his forehead to the Minister’s feet, fawns like a tamed beast, and refuses to move until the Minister relieves himself from this nightmare of servility by a full pardon.

The whole working of the system has been fearful.

Time after time, we have entered the serf field and serf hut,—­have seen the simple round of serf toils and sports,—­have heard the simple chronicles of serf joys and sorrows.  But whether his livery were filthy sheepskin or gold-laced caftan,—­whether he lay on carpets at the door of his master, or in filth on the floor of his cabin,—­whether he gave us cold, stupid stories of his wrongs, or flippant details of his joys,—­whether he blessed his master or cursed him,—­we have wondered at the power which a serf-system has to degrade and imbrute the image of God.

But astonishment was increased a thousand fold at study of the reflex influence for evil upon the serf-owners themselves,—­upon the whole free community,—­upon the very soil of the whole country.

On all those broad plains of Russia, on the daily life of that serf-owning aristocracy, on the whole class which is neither of serfs nor serf-owners, the curse of God is written in letters so big and so black that all mankind may read them.

Farms are untilled, enterprise deadened, invention crippled, education neglected; life is of little value; labor is the badge of servility,—­laziness the very badge and passport of gentility.

Despite the most specious half-measures,—­despite all efforts to galvanize it, to coax life into it, to sting life into it, the nation has remained stagnant.  Not one traveller who does not know that the evils brought on that land by the despotism of the Autocrat are as nothing compared to that dark net-work of curses spread over it by a serf-owning aristocracy.

Into the conflict with this evil Alexander II. entered manfully.

Having been two years upon the throne, having made a plan, having stirred some thought through certain authorized journals, he inspires the nobility in three of the northwestern provinces to memorialize him in regard to emancipation.

Straightway an answer is sent, conveying the outlines of the Emperor’s plan.  The period of transition from serfage to freedom is set at twelve years; at the end of that time the serf is to be fully free, and possessor of his cabin, with an adjoining piece of land.  The provincial nobles are convoked to fill out these outlines with details as to the working out by the serfs of a fair indemnity to their masters.

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The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 10, No. 61, November, 1862 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.