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<h2> CHAPTER VII </h2>
<p>In the winter of 1813 Nicholas married Princess Mary and moved to Bald
Hills with his wife, his mother, and Sonya.</p>
<p>Within four years he had paid off all his remaining debts without selling
any of his wife's property, and having received a small inheritance on the
death of a cousin he paid his debt to Pierre as well.</p>
<p>In another three years, by 1820, he had so managed his affairs that he was
able to buy a small estate adjoining Bald Hills and was negotiating to buy
back Otradnoe—that being his pet dream.</p>
<p>Having started farming from necessity, he soon grew so devoted to it that
it became his favorite and almost his sole occupation. Nicholas was a
plain farmer: he did not like innovations, especially the English ones
then coming into vogue. He laughed at theoretical treatises on estate
management, disliked factories, the raising of expensive products, and the
buying of expensive seed corn, and did not make a hobby of any particular
part of the work on his estate. He always had before his mind's eye the
estate as a whole and not any particular part of it. The chief thing in
his eyes was not the nitrogen in the soil, nor the oxygen in the air, nor
manures, nor special plows, but that most important agent by which
nitrogen, oxygen, manure, and plow were made effective—the peasant
laborer. When Nicholas first began farming and began to understand its
different branches, it was the serf who especially attracted his
attention. The peasant seemed to him not merely a tool, but also a judge
of farming and an end in himself. At first he watched the serfs, trying to
understand their aims and what they considered good and bad, and only
pretended to direct them and give orders while in reality learning from
them their methods, their manner of speech, and their judgment of what was
good and bad. Only when he had understood the peasants' tastes and
aspirations, had learned to talk their language, to grasp the hidden
meaning of their words, and felt akin to them did he begin boldly to
manage his serfs, that is, to perform toward them the duties demanded of
him. And Nicholas' management produced very brilliant results.</p>
<p>Guided by some gift of insight, on taking up the management of the estates
he at once unerringly appointed as bailiff, village elder, and delegate,
the very men the serfs would themselves have chosen had they had the right
to choose, and these posts never changed hands. Before analyzing the
properties of manure, before entering into the debit and credit (as he
ironically called it), he found out how many cattle the peasants had and
increased the number by all possible means. He kept the peasant families
together in the largest groups possible, not allowing the family groups to
divide into separate households. He was hard alike on the lazy, the
depraved, and the weak, and tried to get them expelled from the commune.</p>
<p>He was as careful of the sowing and reaping of the peasants' hay and corn
as of his own, and few landowners had their crops sown and harvested so
early and so well, or got so good a return, as did Nicholas.</p>
<p>He disliked having anything to do with the domestic serfs—the
"drones" as he called them—and everyone said he spoiled them by his
laxity. When a decision had to be taken regarding a domestic serf,
especially if one had to be punished, he always felt undecided and
consulted everybody in the house; but when it was possible to have a
domestic serf conscripted instead of a land worker he did so without the
least hesitation. He never felt any hesitation in dealing with the
peasants. He knew that his every decision would be approved by them all
with very few exceptions.</p>
<p>He did not allow himself either to be hard on or punish a man, or to make
things easy for or reward anyone, merely because he felt inclined to do
so. He could not have said by what standard he judged what he should or
should not do, but the standard was quite firm and definite in his own
mind.</p>
<p>Often, speaking with vexation of some failure or irregularity, he would
say: "What can one do with our Russian peasants?" and imagined that he
could not bear them.</p>
<p>Yet he loved "our Russian peasants" and their way of life with his whole
soul, and for that very reason had understood and assimilated the one way
and manner of farming which produced good results.</p>
<p>Countess Mary was jealous of this passion of her husband's and regretted
that she could not share it; but she could not understand the joys and
vexations he derived from that world, to her so remote and alien. She
could not understand why he was so particularly animated and happy when,
after getting up at daybreak and spending the whole morning in the fields
or on the threshing floor, he returned from the sowing or mowing or
reaping to have tea with her. She did not understand why he spoke with
such admiration and delight of the farming of the thrifty and well-to-do
peasant Matthew Ermishin, who with his family had carted corn all night;
or of the fact that his (Nicholas') sheaves were already stacked before
anyone else had his harvest in. She did not understand why he stepped out
from the window to the veranda and smiled under his mustache and winked so
joyfully, when warm steady rain began to fall on the dry and thirsty
shoots of the young oats, or why when the wind carried away a threatening
cloud during the hay harvest he would return from the barn, flushed,
sunburned, and perspiring, with a smell of wormwood and gentian in his
hair and, gleefully rubbing his hands, would say: "Well, one more day and
my grain and the peasants' will all be under cover."</p>
<p>Still less did she understand why he, kindhearted and always ready to
anticipate her wishes, should become almost desperate when she brought him
a petition from some peasant men or women who had appealed to her to be
excused some work; why he, that kind Nicholas, should obstinately refuse
her, angrily asking her not to interfere in what was not her business. She
felt he had a world apart, which he loved passionately and which had laws
she had not fathomed.</p>
<p>Sometimes when, trying to understand him, she spoke of the good work he
was doing for his serfs, he would be vexed and reply: "Not in the least;
it never entered my head and I wouldn't do that for their good! That's all
poetry and old wives' talk—all that doing good to one's neighbor!
What I want is that our children should not have to go begging. I must put
our affairs in order while I am alive, that's all. And to do that, order
and strictness are essential.... That's all about it!" said he, clenching
his vigorous fist. "And fairness, of course," he added, "for if the
peasant is naked and hungry and has only one miserable horse, he can do no
good either for himself or for me."</p>
<p>And all Nicholas did was fruitful—probably just because he refused
to allow himself to think that he was doing good to others for virtue's
sake. His means increased rapidly; serfs from neighboring estates came to
beg him to buy them, and long after his death the memory of his
administration was devoutly preserved among the serfs. "He was a master...
the peasants' affairs first and then his own. Of course he was not to be
trifled with either—in a word, he was a real master!"</p>
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