Free Russia - William Hepworth Dixon

Free Russia

Transcriber's Note.
Apparent typographical errors have been corrected. The inconsistent use of hyphens has been retained.
CONVENT OF SOLOVETSK IN THE FROZEN SEA.
RUSSIAN INFANTRY ON EASTERN STEPPE ESCORTED BY KOZAKS AND KIRGHIZ.
BY WILLIAM HEPWORTH DIXON.
AUTHOR OF FREE AMERICA. HER MAJESTY'S TOWER. &c.
NEW YORK
HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS. FRANKLIN SQUARE.
1870.
Svobodnaya Rossia— Free Russia—is a word on every lip in that great country; at once the Name and Hope of the new empire born of the Crimean war. In past times Russia was free, even as Germany and France were free. She fell before Asiatic hordes; and the Tartar system lasted, in spirit, if not in form, until the war; but since that conflict ended, the old Russia has been born again. This new country—hoping to be pacific, meaning to be Free—is what I have tried to paint.
My journeys, just completed, carried me from the Polar Sea to the Ural Mountains, from the mouth of the Vistula to the Straits of Yeni Kale, including visits to the four holy shrines of Solovetsk, Pechersk, St. George, and Troitsa. My object being to paint the Living People, I have much to say about pilgrims, monks, and parish priests; about village justice, and patriarchal life; about beggars, tramps, and sectaries; about Kozaks, Kalmuks, and Kirghiz; about workmen's artels, burgher rights, and the division of land; about students' revolts and soldiers' grievances; in short, about the Human Forces which underlie and shape the external politics of our time.
Two journeys made in previous years have helped me to judge the reforms which are opening out the Japan-like empire of Nicolas into the Free Russia of the reigning prince.

William Hepworth Dixon
О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2016-02-03

Темы

Russia; Russia -- Religion

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