| PART 8
Chapter 11
 The day on which Sergey Ivanovitch came to Pokrovskoe was one of
 Levin's most painful days.  It was the very busiest working time,
 when all the peasantry show an extraordinary intensity of
 self-sacrifice in labor, such as is never shown in any other
 conditions of life, and would be highly esteemed if the men who
 showed these qualities themselves thought highly of them, and if
 it were not repeated every year, and if the results of this
 intense labor were not so simple. To reap and bind the rye and oats and to carry it, to mow the
 meadows, turn over the fallows, thrash the seed and sow the
 winter corn--all this seems so simple and ordinary; but to
 succeed in getting through it all everyone in the village, from
 the old man to the young child, must toil incessantly for three
 or four weeks, three times as hard as usual, living on rye-beer,
 onions, and black bread, thrashing and carrying the sheaves at
 night, and not giving more than two or three hours in the
 twenty-four to sleep.  And every year this is done all over
 Russia. Having lived the greater part of his life in the country and in
 the closest relations with the peasants, Levin always felt in
 this busy time that he was infected by this general quickening of
 energy in the people. In the early morning he rode over to the first sowing of the rye,
 and to the oats, which were being carried to the stacks, and
 returning home at the time his wife and sister-in-law were
 getting up, he drank coffee with them and walked to the farm,
 where a new thrashing machine was to be set working to get ready
 the seed-corn. He was standing in the cool granary, still fragrant with the
 leaves of the hazel branches interlaced on the freshly peeled
 aspen beams of the new thatch roof.  He gazed through the open
 door in which the dry bitter dust of the thrashing whirled and
 played, at the grass of the thrashing floor in the sunlight and
 the fresh straw that had been brought in from the barn, then at
 the speckly-headed, white-breasted swallows that flew chirping in
 under the roof and, fluttering their wings, settled in the
 crevices of the doorway, then at the peasants bustling in the
 dark, dusty barn, and he thought strange thoughts. |