登陆注册
4811100000027

第27章

What was its nature?

I had lived in the country, and there I was connected with the rustic poor. Not out of humility, which is worse than pride, but for the sake of telling the truth, which is indispensable for the understanding of the whole course of my thoughts and sentiments, Iwill say that in the country I did very little for the poor, but the demands which were made upon me were so modest that even this little was of use to the people, and formed around me an atmosphere of affection and union with the people, in which it was possible to soothe the gnawing sensation of remorse at the independence of my life. On going to the city, I had hoped to be able to live in the same manner. But here I encountered want of an entirely different sort. City want was both less real, and more exacting and cruel, than country poverty. But the principal point was, that there was so much of it in one spot, that it produced on me a frightful impression. The impression which I experienced in the Lyapinsky house had, at the very first, made me conscious of the deformity of my own life. This feeling was genuine and very powerful. But, notwithstanding its genuineness and power, I was, at that time, so weak that I feared the alteration in my life to which this feeling commended me, and I resorted to a compromise. I believed what everybody told me, and everybody has said, ever since the world was made,--that there is nothing evil in wealth and luxury, that they are given by God, that one may continue to live as a rich man, and yet help the needy. I believed this, and I tried to do it. I wrote an essay, in which I summoned all rich people to my assistance. The rich people all acknowledged themselves morally bound to agree with me, but evidently they either did not wish to do any thing, or they could not do any thing or give any thing to the poor. I began to visit the poor, and I beheld what I had not in the least expected.

On the one hand, I beheld in those dens, as I called them, people whom it was not conceivable that I should help, because they were working people, accustomed to labor and privation, and therefore standing much higher and having a much firmer foothold in life than myself; on the other hand, I saw unfortunate people whom I could not aid because they were exactly like myself. The majority of the unfortunates whom I saw were unhappy only because they had lost the capacity, desire, and habit of earning their own bread; that is to say, their unhappiness consisted in the fact that they were precisely such persons as myself.

I found no unfortunates who were sick, hungry, or cold, to whom Icould render immediate assistance, with the solitary exception of hungry Agafya. And I became convinced, that, on account of my remoteness from the lives of those people whom I desired to help, it would be almost impossible to find any such unfortunates, because all actual wants had already been supplied by the very people among whom these unfortunates live; and, most of all, I was convinced that money cannot effect any change in the life led by these unhappy people.

I was convinced of all this, but out of false shame at abandoning what I had once undertaken, because of my self-delusion as a benefactor, I went on with this matter for a tolerably long time,--and would have gone on with it until it came to nothing of itself,--so that it was with the greatest difficulty that, with the help of Ivan Fedotitch, I got rid, after a fashion, as well as I could, in the tavern of the Rzhanoff house, of the thirty-seven rubles which Idid not regard as belonging to me.

Of course I might have gone on with this business, and have made out of it a semblance of benevolence; by urging the people who had promised me money, I might have collected more, I might have distributed this money, and consoled myself with my charity; but Iperceived, on the one hand, that we rich people neither wish nor are able to share a portion of our a superfluity with the poor (we have so many wants of our own), and that money should not be given to any one, if the object really be to do good and not to give money itself at haphazard, as I had done in the Rzhanoff tavern. And I gave up the whole thing, and went off to the country with despair in my heart.

In the country I tried to write an essay about all this that I had experienced, and to tell why my undertaking had not succeeded. Iwanted to justify myself against the reproaches which had been made to me on the score of my article on the census; I wanted to convict society of its in difference, and to state the causes in which this city poverty has its birth, and the necessity of combating it, and the means of doing so which I saw.

同类推荐
  • 首罗比丘经

    首罗比丘经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 金刚王菩萨秘密念诵仪轨

    金刚王菩萨秘密念诵仪轨

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 洪恩灵济真君自然行道仪

    洪恩灵济真君自然行道仪

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 笠翁对韵

    笠翁对韵

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 笔梦叙

    笔梦叙

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 乱世成圣

    乱世成圣

    本是地球一青年,转生到一个陌生的世界。凭着一股执念不断前行,挡我路者,杀!与我为敌者,杀!伤我身边之人者,杀!纵使前路坎坷,亦要踏着累累白骨登临顶端。
  • 笔法记

    笔法记

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 幸福的微尘

    幸福的微尘

    青春是什么玩意?刻骨铭心的爱?艰难的选择题?在景琼身上,青春占据了一个人人称羡的起点,十七八岁的她便拥有了自由,金钱,浪漫的爱情和真挚的友谊,毫无负担的生活,毫无压力的未来。然而这一切似乎在一个漫长的迷梦中,不知不觉的起了许多微妙的变化,她该如何抉择,家庭?爱情?还是未来?是爱到受伤的宇未闻,还是好到暖心的连城?多么轰轰烈烈的故事都会有尘埃落定的一天,那时候的你,是悲伤,还是幸福的?每一个人仿佛都是在失去之后才能学会珍惜,可青春这个东西,往往是等你明白过来的时候,那玩意已经不叫青春了……
  • 世界模拟之系统是女友

    世界模拟之系统是女友

    他不是个正常的主角。穿越失败?绑定系统失败?没关系,有妹有房父母双忙!还附赠一只只会卖萌的人格化系统!世界末日后为何要抽风去探索黑洞?修仙世界为何离奇出现自助售货机?(省略号)这是至高神的阴谋,还是噬神者的诡计?不,都不是,这是作者的脑洞!(啊!谁扔的砖头!)
  • 暴戾王爷的小妾

    暴戾王爷的小妾

    他是呼风唤雨、无所不能的王爷。她是相府的千金小姐。只一眼,他便在她的心中生根。御花园里,她无意撞见他被人拒绝的一幕,好心安慰却换来他的一句--“滚开,肮脏的女人。”皇上赐婚,他无情地拒绝:“相府小姐?你不过是老狐狸从青楼赎出来的一名妓子罢了,竟然妄想成为我的王妃,真是自讨羞辱。”从千金小姐到青楼妓子,到底,她是什么人?迫于皇威,他终究是娶了她--却只是一名身份低贱的侍妾。大婚之夜,他没有出现,任由她顶着喜帕枯等一夜。望着伤痕累累,趴在床上的她,他却只是扬起嘴角,嘲蔑一笑,然后又无情地给她灌下了浓黑的药汤。在府中被人欺凌之时,他也只是眯起胴眸,立于一旁,任凭巴掌落在她的脸上。众目睽睽之下,他应下了赌局,却无情地将她推出来,做为赌注。她,伤心欲绝却只是笑颜相对,凄眸闪烁,泪眼朦胧,丝毫不能让他心软半分。她,只是他迫不得已娶来的侍妾,必要的时候,他可以把她当成赌注,空虚的时候,他可以把她当作暖床的工具,危难之时,他可以把她当成盾牌遮挡剑芒......***(严重警告,未经作者本人同意,所有网站均不得盗取本文内容,违者必究。)*****************************************************小雨的旧作:《狂情总裁》他是坠落的王子,他是邪恶的野心家,因为了他爱上了大哥的女友。当他再一次回来,找到了她,却扮演了撒旦的角色。他将她禁锢,将她私藏,一切都因为那从他心底狂涌翻滚的爱。感谢网友小情为《暴戾王爷的贱妾》所制作的视频:?pstyle=1********************************************************感谢网友给小雨的书友群群号是:42738023、56299015,欢迎大家参与讨论。感谢网友小情为《暴戾王爷的贱妾》所制作的视频:?pstyle=1********************************************************推荐自己的文:《妖妆》:《昧宠》《溺宠》《狂情总裁》(半价)《首席总裁不好惹》
  • 穿越到游戏商店

    穿越到游戏商店

    一个死大学生突然发现自己推门就能去游戏商店。太好了!黑玉断续膏?买了!啥?你只收银子?好,我去弄银子。哗!这是天香续命露?啊?要大唐铜钱?好,我去潘家园!这这这这这……这星际战舰我要了!!什么?星币?那个,伙计,你能先告诉我星币上哪搞去么?
  • 戮天武神

    戮天武神

    万族鼎力分疆裂土,千百上宗笑主沉浮。天地玄黄谁执牛耳,战气凌天誓破苍穹。少年肩负血海深仇,为探寻自己的身世之谜,一路行来披荆斩棘。神秘宗门追杀不断,这其中到底隐藏着什么惊天阴谋……
  • 血色星光

    血色星光

    本书是以历史上首届中共广东省委暨粤北省委这段历史为骨架,除地名及重大事件的人、事、时遵循史实,余皆依文学创作演绎。
  • 天下大势

    天下大势

    这是一部颇具新意的政治讽刺小说。辛亥武昌首义,浪荡公子边义夫身不由已卷入革命洪流,因在混乱中三炮轰城,意外成了革命新贵。不料,官瘾尚未过足,即被政变推翻.边义夫无路可走,旋即发动二次革命,立志以革命的名义去做窃国大盗。于是,一支号称为人民不吃土而努力奋斗的“四民主义”的队伍横空出世,本来就形迹可疑的“革命”变成了一场国内鸦片战争。战争结束,边义夫成了一方诸侯,靠林立的枪杆子成了北京段祺瑞政府的政治贸易伙伴。
  • 一宠成瘾:早安,女王殿下

    一宠成瘾:早安,女王殿下

    三年前,她被她爱慕的男人挑断手筋。三年后,她携最爱的男人,笑眼盈盈的回到那个地方!