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第4章

lecture vi-第4章

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retained in the hands of the enfranchised peasant; and among the
many schemes of emancipation; which circulated in the form of
manuscript during the latter part of Nicholas's reign; more than
one advocated the necessity of retaining the ancient ties which
bound the peasant to the soil by making him the legal owner of
his share in the open fields。
    The 〃providential mission〃 of the Czar Alexander the Second
was therefore disclosed in a state of society which was already
prepared to accept the general outlines of a social reform; the
end of which would be not only to liberate; but also to enrich;
the peasant。 As soon as Alexander ascended the throne rumours
began to be circulated as to the approaching abolition of
serfdom。 The unexpected death of his father placed him on the
throne at a moment of great and general depression; occasioned by
the defeat of the Russian military forces under the walls of
Sebastopol。 The young Emperor made an eloquent appeal to the
patriotism of his subjects; inviting them to increase the means
of defence by a voluntary levy of a kind of militia; known under
the name of Opolchenie。 This measure strengthened the belief in
the nearness of social and political reforms。 The peasants;
enrolled in the self…raised regiments of the militia; began to
think that their more or less voluntary sacrifice of life and
fortune would he rewarded by a complete liberation from the
ignominious bonds of personal servitude。 Crowds of serfs asked to
be admitted into the militia; expecting to attain freedom in this
way。
    When the Peace of Paris was signed; and the peasants of the
militia were ordered to return to their daily tasks; they openly
expressed their belief that the charters by which the Emperor had
liberated them from bondage were concealed by their landlords。
These rumours produced great excitement。 The years 1854 and 1855
are notorious for a series of local rebellions。 These
insurrections took place partly on the shores of the Volga; which
had already felt; in the time of Catherine the Second; the
horrors of a jacquerie; partly in some Central and South…western
Governments; such as Vladimir; Riasan; Tambov; Pensa; Voronej;
and Kiev。 These revolutionary movements; directed exclusively
against the feudal aristocracy; produced a great impression on
the Czar Alexander。 Addressing the chiefs of the Moscovite
nobility (the so…called marshals); the Czar showed his
appreciation of the wants of the time by the following words:
〃Gentlemen; you surely understand yourselves the impossibility of
retaining; without alteration and change; the existing mode of
owning souls 'a usual expression; the meaning of which is the
right to the unpaid work of the serfs'。 It is better to abolish
personal servitude by legislative measures than to see it
abolished by a movement from below。 I ask you to consider such
measures as might forward this end。〃 These promising words;
although followed by a direct declaration that serfdom was not to
be abolished at once; strengthened the expectations of those who
thought that the new reign would inaugurate an era of wide social
and political reform。 Although the Governor…General of Moscow;
Zakrevsky; did his best to persuade the nobility that all
projects concerning the abolition of serfdom were laid aside; it
very soon appeared that such was by no means the intention of
the Czar; for during the coronation the Home Secretary; Lanskoy;
by the direct command of Alexander; entered into communication
with those noblemen who were present in Moscow; in order to
ascertain what were their opinions as to the best means of
bringing about an amelioration in the actual condition of the
serfs。 These negotiations left no doubt as to the animosity with
which the nobility of Great Russia considered every plan tending
to the emancipation of the peasant。 This induced the Minister to
turn his eyes to those provinces in which the idea of liberating
the serfs had taken root at the time when personal servitude had
been abolished by Napoleon I in the neighbouring districts of
Poland; particularly the Governments of Vilna; Kovno; and Grodno。
The Lithuanian nobles were already favourable to the idea; and
were easily induced by the Governor General Nasimov to present to
the Czar an address asking for the abolition of bondage; but at
the same time demanding exclusive possession of the land for the
nobility。 You therefore see that the conditions on which the
Lithuanian nobles wanted to see the enfranchisement carried out
were the same as those on which it had been already carried out
in Poland and the Baltic provinces。 Seeing the difficulty of
preserving for their own profit the unpaid services of the
peasant; they were anxious to secure to themselves the monopoly
of the soil。 The serf was to be allowed to become a free person
only on condition of remaining a proletarian; living exclusively
on the wages he earned。 Carried out on such conditions; the
emancipation would hardly have met with the approval of those who
were most directly concerned。 As far back as the reign of the
Empress Catherine the peasant had plainly declared that he wanted
not only liberty; but land。 He was mindful of his ancient state;
previous to that of bondage; which; as we have already shown; was
the state of an owner in common of the ground he made fruitful by
his work。 No power on earth would have been strong enough to
break the ties; centuries old; which united him to the soil。 It
was no doubt in the interests of the nobility to see these ties
broken; for who could be the gainers in a scheme which promised
enhancement of the mercantile value of the soil and cheap labour;
if not those who had secured to themselves the monopoly of the
property in land? What; on the other hand; was the liberated
proletarian to become if not a labourer; given up to eternal toil
on the estates of a land…monopolising nobility; and bound to
receive from their hands those bare wages which would cover the
expense of his existence? The Emperor and some persons in his
confidence; were conscious of the social evils which the
execution of such a plan would produce。 It will be to the eternal
glory of Alexander to have answered the request of the Lithuanian
nobility by a decree by which; whilst allowing the establishment
of local committees for the elaboration of measures which might
achieve the emancipation in view; he plainly declared that the
liberated serfs ought to be secured at least in the possession of
their homesteads and of the land belonging to these homesteads
(the so…called homestead…land  ousadebnaiia zemlia)。 This
expression was obscure and ambiguous; for it was not easy to
establish the limits of the so…called homestead…land。 Was it to
be considered as a compound of all the various communal
privileges of which the peasant was possessed; or to mean only
the ground directly surrounding his habitation? This question
remained unsettled。
    In the winter of 1851 the nobility of Petersburg; not wishing
to remain behind that of Lithuania; presented to the Emperor an
address very like the one just mentioned。 This address and the
decree it provoked deserve to be mentioned; for they show; on one
hand; the desire of the aristocracy to preserve not only all the
advantages of a land…owning class; but also to a certain extent
the social dependence under which the peasant had lived towards
them during the preceding centuries; and; on the other hand; the
firm decision of the Government to secure to the peasant at least
his property in the homestead he occupied; and in the land which
surrounded it。 The decree is curious too as a precise statement
of the conditions on which the Government intended at first to
accomplish the difficult task of emancipation。 They are; as you
will soon perceive; very different from those on which the
emancipation was actually performed。 No question is made of the
direct interference of the State in order to buy back from the
nobleman the plots of ground occupied by the serfs。 This end is
to be alone attained by way of free agreement between the
parties。 As long as this agreement has not taken place the serf
is to continue to perform

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