<h3>Chapter 27</h3>
<p>“If I’d only the heart to throw up what’s been set going ...
such a lot of trouble wasted ... I’d turn my back on the whole business,
sell up, go off like Nikolay Ivanovitch ... to hear <i>La Belle
Hélène</i>,” said the landowner, a pleasant smile lighting up his shrewd
old face.</p>
<p>“But you see you don’t throw it up,” said Nikolay Ivanovitch
Sviazhsky; “so there must be something gained.”</p>
<p>“The only gain is that I live in my own house, neither bought nor hired.
Besides, one keeps hoping the people will learn sense. Though, instead of that,
you’d never believe it—the drunkenness, the immorality! They keep
chopping and changing their bits of land. Not a sight of a horse or a cow. The
peasant’s dying of hunger, but just go and take him on as a laborer,
he’ll do his best to do you a mischief, and then bring you up before the
justice of the peace.”</p>
<p>“But then you make complaints to the justice too,” said Sviazhsky.</p>
<p>“I lodge complaints? Not for anything in the world! Such a talking, and
such a to-do, that one would have cause to regret it. At the works, for
instance, they pocketed the advance-money and made off. What did the justice
do? Why, acquitted them. Nothing keeps them in order but their own communal
court and their village elder. He’ll flog them in the good old style! But
for that there’d be nothing for it but to give it all up and run
away.”</p>
<p>Obviously the landowner was chaffing Sviazhsky, who, far from resenting it, was
apparently amused by it.</p>
<p>“But you see we manage our land without such extreme measures,”
said he, smiling: “Levin and I and this gentleman.”</p>
<p>He indicated the other landowner.</p>
<p>“Yes, the thing’s done at Mihail Petrovitch’s, but ask him
how it’s done. Do you call that a rational system?” said the
landowner, obviously rather proud of the word “rational.”</p>
<p>“My system’s very simple,” said Mihail Petrovitch,
“thank God. All my management rests on getting the money ready for the
autumn taxes, and the peasants come to me, ‘Father, master, help
us!’ Well, the peasants are all one’s neighbors; one feels for
them. So one advances them a third, but one says: ‘Remember, lads, I have
helped you, and you must help me when I need it—whether it’s the
sowing of the oats, or the haycutting, or the harvest’; and well, one
agrees, so much for each taxpayer—though there are dishonest ones among
them too, it’s true.”</p>
<p>Levin, who had long been familiar with these patriarchal methods, exchanged
glances with Sviazhsky and interrupted Mihail Petrovitch, turning again to the
gentleman with the gray whiskers.</p>
<p>“Then what do you think?” he asked; “what system is one to
adopt nowadays?”</p>
<p>“Why, manage like Mihail Petrovitch, or let the land for half the crop or
for rent to the peasants; that one can do—only that’s just how the
general prosperity of the country is being ruined. Where the land with
serf-labor and good management gave a yield of nine to one, on the half-crop
system it yields three to one. Russia has been ruined by the
emancipation!”</p>
<p>Sviazhsky looked with smiling eyes at Levin, and even made a faint gesture of
irony to him; but Levin did not think the landowner’s words absurd, he
understood them better than he did Sviazhsky. A great deal more of what the
gentleman with the gray whiskers said to show in what way Russia was ruined by
the emancipation struck him indeed as very true, new to him, and quite
incontestable. The landowner unmistakably spoke his own individual
thought—a thing that very rarely happens—and a thought to which he
had been brought not by a desire of finding some exercise for an idle brain,
but a thought which had grown up out of the conditions of his life, which he
had brooded over in the solitude of his village, and had considered in every
aspect.</p>
<p>“The point is, don’t you see, that progress of every sort is only
made by the use of authority,” he said, evidently wishing to show he was
not without culture. “Take the reforms of Peter, of Catherine, of
Alexander. Take European history. And progress in agriculture more than
anything else—the potato, for instance, that was introduced among us by
force. The wooden plough too wasn’t always used. It was introduced maybe
in the days before the Empire, but it was probably brought in by force. Now, in
our own day, we landowners in the serf times used various improvements in our
husbandry: drying machines and thrashing machines, and carting manure and all
the modern implements—all that we brought into use by our authority, and
the peasants opposed it at first, and ended by imitating us. Now, by the
abolition of serfdom we have been deprived of our authority; and so our
husbandry, where it had been raised to a high level, is bound to sink to the
most savage primitive condition. That’s how I see it.”</p>
<p>“But why so? If it’s rational, you’ll be able to keep up the
same system with hired labor,” said Sviazhsky.</p>
<p>“We’ve no power over them. With whom am I going to work the system,
allow me to ask?”</p>
<p>“There it is—the labor force—the chief element in
agriculture,” thought Levin.</p>
<p>“With laborers.”</p>
<p>“The laborers won’t work well, and won’t work with good
implements. Our laborer can do nothing but get drunk like a pig, and when
he’s drunk he ruins everything you give him. He makes the horses ill with
too much water, cuts good harness, barters the tires of the wheels for drink,
drops bits of iron into the thrashing machine, so as to break it. He loathes
the sight of anything that’s not after his fashion. And that’s how
it is the whole level of husbandry has fallen. Lands gone out of cultivation,
overgrown with weeds, or divided among the peasants, and where millions of
bushels were raised you get a hundred thousand; the wealth of the country has
decreased. If the same thing had been done, but with care that....”</p>
<p>And he proceeded to unfold his own scheme of emancipation by means of which
these drawbacks might have been avoided.</p>
<p>This did not interest Levin, but when he had finished, Levin went back to his
first position, and, addressing Sviazhsky, and trying to draw him into
expressing his serious opinion:—</p>
<p>“That the standard of culture is falling, and that with our present
relations to the peasants there is no possibility of farming on a rational
system to yield a profit—that’s perfectly true,” said he.</p>
<p>“I don’t believe it,” Sviazhsky replied quite seriously;
“all I see is that we don’t know how to cultivate the land, and
that our system of agriculture in the serf days was by no means too high, but
too low. We have no machines, no good stock, no efficient supervision; we
don’t even know how to keep accounts. Ask any landowner; he won’t
be able to tell you what crop’s profitable, and what’s not.”</p>
<p>“Italian bookkeeping,” said the gentleman of the gray whiskers
ironically. “You may keep your books as you like, but if they spoil
everything for you, there won’t be any profit.”</p>
<p>“Why do they spoil things? A poor thrashing machine, or your Russian
presser, they will break, but my steam press they don’t break. A wretched
Russian nag they’ll ruin, but keep good dray-horses—they
won’t ruin them. And so it is all round. We must raise our farming to a
higher level.”</p>
<p>“Oh, if one only had the means to do it, Nikolay Ivanovitch! It’s
all very well for you; but for me, with a son to keep at the university, lads
to be educated at the high school—how am I going to buy these
dray-horses?”</p>
<p>“Well, that’s what the land banks are for.”</p>
<p>“To get what’s left me sold by auction? No, thank you.”</p>
<p>“I don’t agree that it’s necessary or possible to raise the
level of agriculture still higher,” said Levin. “I devote myself to
it, and I have means, but I can do nothing. As to the banks, I don’t know
to whom they’re any good. For my part, anyway, whatever I’ve spent
money on in the way of husbandry, it has been a loss: stock—a loss,
machinery—a loss.”</p>
<p>“That’s true enough,” the gentleman with the gray whiskers
chimed in, positively laughing with satisfaction.</p>
<p>“And I’m not the only one,” pursued Levin. “I mix with
all the neighboring landowners, who are cultivating their land on a rational
system; they all, with rare exceptions, are doing so at a loss. Come, tell us
how does your land do—does it pay?” said Levin, and at once in
Sviazhsky’s eyes he detected that fleeting expression of alarm which he
had noticed whenever he had tried to penetrate beyond the outer chambers of
Sviazhsky’s mind.</p>
<p>Moreover, this question on Levin’s part was not quite in good faith.
Madame Sviazhskaya had just told him at tea that they had that summer invited a
German expert in bookkeeping from Moscow, who for a consideration of five
hundred roubles had investigated the management of their property, and found
that it was costing them a loss of three thousand odd roubles. She did not
remember the precise sum, but it appeared that the German had worked it out to
the fraction of a farthing.</p>
<p>The gray-whiskered landowner smiled at the mention of the profits of
Sviazhsky’s famling, obviously aware how much gain his neighbor and
marshal was likely to be making.</p>
<p>“Possibly it does not pay,” answered Sviazhsky. “That merely
proves either that I’m a bad manager, or that I’ve sunk my capital
for the increase of my rents.”</p>
<p>“Oh, rent!” Levin cried with horror. “Rent there may be in
Europe, where land has been improved by the labor put into it, but with us all
the land is deteriorating from the labor put into it—in other words
they’re working it out; so there’s no question of rent.”</p>
<p>“How no rent? It’s a law.”</p>
<p>“Then we’re outside the law; rent explains nothing for us, but
simply muddles us. No, tell me how there can be a theory of rent?...”</p>
<p>“Will you have some junket? Masha, pass us some junket or
raspberries.” He turned to his wife. “Extraordinarily late the
raspberries are lasting this year.”</p>
<p>And in the happiest frame of mind Sviazhsky got up and walked off, apparently
supposing the conversation to have ended at the very point when to Levin it
seemed that it was only just beginning.</p>
<p>Having lost his antagonist, Levin continued the conversation with the
gray-whiskered landowner, trying to prove to him that all the difficulty arises
from the fact that we don’t find out the peculiarities and habits of our
laborer; but the landowner, like all men who think independently and in
isolation, was slow in taking in any other person’s idea, and
particularly partial to his own. He stuck to it that the Russian peasant is a
swine and likes swinishness, and that to get him out of his swinishness one
must have authority, and there is none; one must have the stick, and we have
become so liberal that we have all of a sudden replaced the stick that served
us for a thousand years by lawyers and model prisons, where the worthless,
stinking peasant is fed on good soup and has a fixed allowance of cubic feet of
air.</p>
<p>“What makes you think,” said Levin, trying to get back to the
question, “that it’s impossible to find some relation to the
laborer in which the labor would become productive?”</p>
<p>“That never could be so with the Russian peasantry; we’ve no power
over them,” answered the landowner.</p>
<p>“How can new conditions be found?” said Sviazhsky. Having eaten
some junket and lighted a cigarette, he came back to the discussion. “All
possible relations to the labor force have been defined and studied,” he
said. “The relic of barbarism, the primitive commune with each guarantee
for all, will disappear of itself; serfdom has been abolished—there
remains nothing but free labor, and its forms are fixed and ready made, and
must be adopted. Permanent hands, day-laborers, rammers—you can’t
get out of those forms.”</p>
<p>“But Europe is dissatisfied with these forms.”</p>
<p>“Dissatisfied, and seeking new ones. And will find them, in all
probability.”</p>
<p>“That’s just what I was meaning,” answered Levin. “Why
shouldn’t we seek them for ourselves?”</p>
<p>“Because it would be just like inventing afresh the means for
constructing railways. They are ready, invented.”</p>
<p>“But if they don’t do for us, if they’re stupid?” said
Levin.</p>
<p>And again he detected the expression of alarm in the eyes of Sviazhsky.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes; we’ll bury the world under our caps! We’ve found
the secret Europe was seeking for! I’ve heard all that; but, excuse me,
do you know all that’s been done in Europe on the question of the
organization of labor?”</p>
<p>“No, very little.”</p>
<p>“That question is now absorbing the best minds in Europe. The
Schulze-Delitsch movement.... And then all this enormous literature of the
labor question, the most liberal Lassalle movement ... the Mulhausen
experiment? That’s a fact by now, as you’re probably aware.”</p>
<p>“I have some idea of it, but very vague.”</p>
<p>“No, you only say that; no doubt you know all about it as well as I do.
I’m not a professor of sociology, of course, but it interested me, and
really, if it interests you, you ought to study it.”</p>
<p>“But what conclusion have they come to?”</p>
<p>“Excuse me....”</p>
<p>The two neighbors had risen, and Sviazhsky, once more checking Levin in his
inconvenient habit of peeping into what was beyond the outer chambers of his
mind, went to see his guests out.</p>
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