BOOK TEN: 1812
9. CHAPTER IX
 
Until Prince Andrew settled in Bogucharovo its owners had always
 been absentees, and its peasants were of quite a different character
 from those of Bald Hills. They differed from them in speech, dress,
 and disposition. They were called steppe peasants. The old prince used
 to approve of them for their endurance at work when they came to
 Bald Hills to help with the harvest or to dig ponds, and ditches,
 but he disliked them for their boorishness. 
Prince Andrew's last stay at Bogucharovo, when he introduced
 hospitals and schools and reduced the quitrent the peasants had to
 pay, had not softened their disposition but had on the contrary
 strengthened in them the traits of character the old prince called
 boorishness. Various obscure rumors were always current among them: at
 one time a rumor that they would all be enrolled as Cossacks; at
 another of a new religion to which they were all to be converted; then
 of some proclamation of the Tsar's and of an oath to the Tsar Paul
 in 1797 (in connection with which it was rumored that freedom had been
 granted them but the landowners had stopped it), then of Peter
 Fedorovich's return to the throne in seven years' time, when
 everything would be made free and so "simple" that there would be no
 restrictions. Rumors of the war with Bonaparte and his invasion were
 connected in their minds with the same sort of vague notions of
 Antichrist, the end of the world, and "pure freedom." 
In the vicinity of Bogucharovo were large villages belonging to
 the crown or to owners whose serfs paid quitrent and could work
 where they pleased. There were very few resident landlords in the
 neighborhood and also very few domestic or literate serfs, and in
 the lives of the peasantry of those parts the mysterious undercurrents
 in the life of the Russian people, the causes and meaning of which are
 so baffling to contemporaries, were more clearly and strongly
 noticeable than among others. One instance, which had occurred some
 twenty years before, was a movement among the peasants to emigrate
 to some unknown "warm rivers." Hundreds of peasants, among them the
 Bogucharovo folk, suddenly began selling their cattle and moving in
 whole families toward the southeast. As birds migrate to somewhere
 beyond the sea, so these men with their wives and children streamed to
 the southeast, to parts where none of them had ever been. They set off
 in caravans, bought their freedom one by one or ran away, and drove or
 walked toward the "warm rivers." Many of them were punished, some sent
 to Siberia, many died of cold and hunger on the road, many returned of
 their own accord, and the movement died down of itself just as it
 had sprung up, without apparent reason. But such undercurrents still
 existed among the people and gathered new forces ready to manifest
 themselves just as strangely, unexpectedly, and at the same time
 simply, naturally, and forcibly. Now in 1812, to anyone living in
 close touch with these people it was apparent that these undercurrents
 were acting strongly and nearing an eruption. 
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