登陆注册
5382300000174

第174章 CHAPTER XXV(9)

Deeply imbued with that romantic spirit which distorted all the intellectual activity of the time, the Slavophils often indulged in the wildest exaggerations, condemning everything foreign and praising everything Russian. When in this mood they saw in the history of the West nothing but violence, slavery, and egotism, and in that of their own country free-will, liberty, and peace. The fact that Russia did not possess free political institutions was adduced as a precious fruit of that spirit of Christian resignation and self-sacrifice which places the Russian at such an immeasurable height above the proud, selfish European; and because Russia possessed few of the comforts and conveniences of common life, the West was accused of having made comfort its God! We need not, however, dwell on these puerilities, which only gained for their authors the reputation of being ignorant, narrow-minded men, imbued with a hatred of enlightenment and desirous of leading their country back to its primitive barbarism. What the Slavophils really condemned, at least in their calmer moments, was not European culture, but the uncritical, indiscriminate adoption of it by their countrymen. Their tirades against foreign culture must appear excusable when we remember that many Russians of the upper ranks could speak and write French more correctly than their native language, and that even the great national poet Pushkin was not ashamed to confess--what was not true, and a mere piece of affectation--that "the language of Europe" was more familiar to him than his mother-tongue!

The Slavophil doctrine, though it made a great noise in the world, never found many adherents. The society of St. Petersburg regarded it as one of those harmless provincial eccentricities which are always to be found in Moscow. In the modern capital, with its foreign name, its streets and squares on the European model, its palaces and churches in the Renaissance style, and its passionate love of everything French, any attempt to resuscitate the old Boyaric times would have been eminently ridiculous. Indeed, hostility to St. Petersburg and to "the Petersburg period of Russian history" is one of the characteristic traits of genuine Slavophilism. In Moscow the doctrine found a more appropriate home. There the ancient churches, with the tombs of Grand Princes and holy martyrs, the palace in which the Tsars of Muscovy had lived, the Kremlin which had resisted--not always successfully--the attacks of savage Tartars and heretical Poles, the venerable Icons that had many a time protected the people from danger, the block of masonry from which, on solemn occasions, the Tsar and the Patriarch had addressed the assembled multitude--these, and a hundred other monuments sanctified by tradition, have kept alive in the popular memory some vague remembrance of the olden time, and are still capable of awakening antiquarian patriotism.

The inhabitants, too, have preserved something of the old Muscovite character. Whilst successive sovereigns have been striving to make the country a progressive European empire, Moscow has remained the home of passive conservatism and an asylum for the discontented, especially for the disappointed aspirants to Imperial favour.

Abandoned by the modern Emperors, she can glory in her ancient Tsars. But even the Muscovites were not prepared to accept the Slavophil doctrine in the extreme form which it assumed, and were not a little perplexed by the eccentricities of those who professed it. Plain, sensible people, though they might be proud of being citizens of the ancient capital, and might thoroughly enjoy a joke at the expense of St. Petersburg, could not understand a little coterie of enthusiasts who sought neither official rank nor decorations, who slighted many of the conventionalities of the higher classes to which by birth and education they belonged, who loved to fraternise with the common people, and who occasionally dressed in the national costume which had been discarded by the nobles since the time of Peter the Great.

同类推荐
  • 灵宝净明院行遣式

    灵宝净明院行遣式

    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。
  • 太上元始天尊证果真经

    太上元始天尊证果真经

    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。
  • 题兴善寺隋松院与人

    题兴善寺隋松院与人

    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。
  • 慨古录

    慨古录

    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。
  • 佛说不思议功德诸佛所护念经

    佛说不思议功德诸佛所护念经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 所知录

    所知录

    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。
  • 快穿之奇妙之旅

    快穿之奇妙之旅

    传闻掌管三千世界的主神冷血无情,殊不知主神只是很无聊。系统表示:我只是想谈恋爱。
  • 偷回来的段二夫人

    偷回来的段二夫人

    他是风流倜傥的段二爷,他腹黑,他忠犬,他被一个女人的厨艺绑住了胃她是穿越而来的沐秋罗,她洒脱,她任性,她也轻轻的把一个王爷推倒在梅子酒的闺房人生总是难以预测,与其悲天悯人,不如把握被宠爱的时光。
  • 快穿契约

    快穿契约

    狐君策一袭红衣,白玉的手勾起一缕白色的发丝把玩,嘴角若有若无的邪笑,躺在无数百骨之上的王座中,旁边开满了鲜艳的彼岸花,金色的瞳孔中有到黑色竖横,此刻正眯着眼打量着排队喝孟婆汤的众鬼,抖了抖狐耳,绝色的容颜,慵懒的气质,吸引了众鬼侧目。不知,引起阁下的目光了吗。与吾缔结契约吧,汝想要的样子吾都有
  • 那人却不在灯火阑珊处

    那人却不在灯火阑珊处

    叶梦雪还能清楚的记得,当初他是爱着自己的。再次见到他时,他成为一家上市公司的总裁,然而他不再是曾经那个唯唯诺诺的祈亮,他改头换面变成了自信桀骜的祁彻,就是这样的他让她至死不渝的爱上,而她在他的心中早已由爱生恨。
  • 最让你顿悟一生的感动故事(智慧背囊)

    最让你顿悟一生的感动故事(智慧背囊)

    本书汇集了几百个令你感动的故事,以顿悟点评来进行点拨,使广大读者在读过故事后有所顿悟,有所启发,进而开创自己更加美好的未来。愿精彩的故事、优美的语言带给你与众不向的感受,助你的人生更上层楼!
  • 海贼之守护之心

    海贼之守护之心

    (跟船流)如果善良也算罪过如果维护贵族才是真正职责那我们海军背负的正义,到底是谁的正义?海军英雄枉死,幼子为奴十余年,背负血海深仇,他将如何抉择。
  • 倾城公主要选夫

    倾城公主要选夫

    缘起缘落,一切皆由一个缘字开始。她被赞貌美倾国,绝代风华的公主,他被称是雍容华贵,拥有与生俱来的王者之质的王,他胸怀天下,他风流却独许她一颗完整的心,不惜舍弃那唾手可得的王位。他总是用温柔的眼神注视着她的背影,追随于她的左右,殊不知她早已痴心他付。烽烟起,战火燎,自古江山美人如那古语所言,鱼与熊掌不可兼得。
  • 棣秋馆戊戌日记

    棣秋馆戊戌日记

    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。
  • 长风先生,多指教

    长风先生,多指教

    “丫头,理一下我呗”“我比你大,你好意思叫我丫头?”“苏大夫,我疼”“哪里疼?”“心疼”“滚犊子”