<h3>Chapter 3</h3>
<p>“Do you know, I’ve been thinking about you,” said Sergey
Ivanovitch. “It’s beyond everything what’s being done in the
district, according to what this doctor tells me. He’s a very intelligent
fellow. And as I’ve told you before, I tell you again: it’s not
right for you not to go to the meetings, and altogether to keep out of the
district business. If decent people won’t go into it, of course
it’s bound to go all wrong. We pay the money, and it all goes in
salaries, and there are no schools, nor district nurses, nor midwives, nor
drugstores—nothing.”</p>
<p>“Well, I did try, you know,” Levin said slowly and unwillingly.
“I can’t! and so there’s no help for it.”</p>
<p>“But why can’t you? I must own I can’t make it out.
Indifference, incapacity—I won’t admit; surely it’s not
simply laziness?”</p>
<p>“None of those things. I’ve tried, and I see I can do
nothing,” said Levin.</p>
<p>He had hardly grasped what his brother was saying. Looking towards the plough
land across the river, he made out something black, but he could not
distinguish whether it was a horse or the bailiff on horseback.</p>
<p>“Why is it you can do nothing? You made an attempt and didn’t
succeed, as you think, and you give in. How can you have so little
self-respect?”</p>
<p>“Self-respect!” said Levin, stung to the quick by his
brother’s words; “I don’t understand. If they’d told me
at college that other people understood the integral calculus, and I
didn’t, then pride would have come in. But in this case one wants first
to be convinced that one has certain qualifications for this sort of business,
and especially that all this business is of great importance.”</p>
<p>“What! do you mean to say it’s not of importance?” said
Sergey Ivanovitch, stung to the quick too at his brother’s considering
anything of no importance that interested him, and still more at his obviously
paying little attention to what he was saying.</p>
<p>“I don’t think it important; it does not take hold of me, I
can’t help it,” answered Levin, making out that what he saw was the
bailiff, and that the bailiff seemed to be letting the peasants go off the
ploughed land. They were turning the plough over. “Can they have finished
ploughing?” he wondered.</p>
<p>“Come, really though,” said the elder brother, with a frown on his
handsome, clever face, “there’s a limit to everything. It’s
very well to be original and genuine, and to dislike everything
conventional—I know all about that; but really, what you’re saying
either has no meaning, or it has a very wrong meaning. How can you think it a
matter of no importance whether the peasant, whom you love as you
assert....”</p>
<p>“I never did assert it,” thought Konstantin Levin.</p>
<p>“...dies without help? The ignorant peasant-women starve the children,
and the people stagnate in darkness, and are helpless in the hands of every
village clerk, while you have at your disposal a means of helping them, and
don’t help them because to your mind it’s of no importance.”</p>
<p>And Sergey Ivanovitch put before him the alternative: either you are so
undeveloped that you can’t see all that you can do, or you won’t
sacrifice your ease, your vanity, or whatever it is, to do it.</p>
<p>Konstantin Levin felt that there was no course open to him but to submit, or to
confess to a lack of zeal for the public good. And this mortified him and hurt
his feelings.</p>
<p>“It’s both,” he said resolutely: “I don’t see
that it was possible....”</p>
<p>“What! was it impossible, if the money were properly laid out, to provide
medical aid?”</p>
<p>“Impossible, as it seems to me.... For the three thousand square miles of
our district, what with our thaws, and the storms, and the work in the fields,
I don’t see how it is possible to provide medical aid all over. And
besides, I don’t believe in medicine.”</p>
<p>“Oh, well, that’s unfair ... I can quote to you thousands of
instances.... But the schools, anyway.”</p>
<p>“Why have schools?”</p>
<p>“What do you mean? Can there be two opinions of the advantage of
education? If it’s a good thing for you, it’s a good thing for
everyone.”</p>
<p>Konstantin Levin felt himself morally pinned against a wall, and so he got hot,
and unconsciously blurted out the chief cause of his indifference to public
business.</p>
<p>“Perhaps it may all be very good; but why should I worry myself about
establishing dispensaries which I shall never make use of, and schools to which
I shall never send my children, to which even the peasants don’t want to
send their children, and to which I’ve no very firm faith that they ought
to send them?” said he.</p>
<p>Sergey Ivanovitch was for a minute surprised at this unexpected view of the
subject; but he promptly made a new plan of attack. He was silent for a little,
drew out a hook, threw it in again, and turned to his brother smiling.</p>
<p>“Come, now.... In the first place, the dispensary is needed. We ourselves
sent for the district doctor for Agafea Mihalovna.”</p>
<p>“Oh, well, but I fancy her wrist will never be straight again.”</p>
<p>“That remains to be proved.... Next, the peasant who can read and write
is as a workman of more use and value to you.”</p>
<p>“No, you can ask anyone you like,” Konstantin Levin answered with
decision, “the man that can read and write is much inferior as a workman.
And mending the highroads is an impossibility; and as soon as they put up
bridges they’re stolen.”</p>
<p>“Still, that’s not the point,” said Sergey Ivanovitch,
frowning. He disliked contradiction, and still more, arguments that were
continually skipping from one thing to another, introducing new and
disconnected points, so that there was no knowing to which to reply. “Do
you admit that education is a benefit for the people?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I admit it,” said Levin without thinking, and he was
conscious immediately that he had said what he did not think. He felt that if
he admitted that, it would be proved that he had been talking meaningless
rubbish. How it would be proved he could not tell, but he knew that this would
inevitably be logically proved to him, and he awaited the proofs.</p>
<p>The argument turned out to be far simpler than he had expected.</p>
<p>“If you admit that it is a benefit,” said Sergey Ivanovitch,
“then, as an honest man, you cannot help caring about it and sympathizing
with the movement, and so wishing to work for it.”</p>
<p>“But I still do not admit this movement to be just,” said
Konstantin Levin, reddening a little.</p>
<p>“What! But you said just now....”</p>
<p>“That’s to say, I don’t admit it’s being either good or
possible.”</p>
<p>“That you can’t tell without making the trial.”</p>
<p>“Well, supposing that’s so,” said Levin, though he did not
suppose so at all, “supposing that is so, still I don’t see, all
the same, what I’m to worry myself about it for.”</p>
<p>“How so?”</p>
<p>“No; since we are talking, explain it to me from the philosophical point
of view,” said Levin.</p>
<p>“I can’t see where philosophy comes in,” said Sergey
Ivanovitch, in a tone, Levin fancied, as though he did not admit his
brother’s right to talk about philosophy. And that irritated Levin.</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you, then,” he said with heat, “I imagine
the mainspring of all our actions is, after all, self-interest. Now in the
local institutions I, as a nobleman, see nothing that could conduce to my
prosperity, and the roads are not better and could not be better; my horses
carry me well enough over bad ones. Doctors and dispensaries are no use to me.
An arbitrator of disputes is no use to me. I never appeal to him, and never
shall appeal to him. The schools are no good to me, but positively harmful, as
I told you. For me the district institutions simply mean the liability to pay
fourpence halfpenny for every three acres, to drive into the town, sleep with
bugs, and listen to all sorts of idiocy and loathsomeness, and self-interest
offers me no inducement.”</p>
<p>“Excuse me,” Sergey Ivanovitch interposed with a smile,
“self-interest did not induce us to work for the emancipation of the
serfs, but we did work for it.”</p>
<p>“No!” Konstantin Levin broke in with still greater heat; “the
emancipation of the serfs was a different matter. There self-interest did come
in. One longed to throw off that yoke that crushed us, all decent people among
us. But to be a town councilor and discuss how many dustmen are needed, and how
chimneys shall be constructed in the town in which I don’t live—to
serve on a jury and try a peasant who’s stolen a flitch of bacon, and
listen for six hours at a stretch to all sorts of jabber from the counsel for
the defense and the prosecution, and the president cross-examining my old
half-witted Alioshka, ‘Do you admit, prisoner in the dock, the fact of
the removal of the bacon?’ ‘Eh?’”</p>
<p>Konstantin Levin had warmed to his subject, and began mimicking the president
and the half-witted Alioshka: it seemed to him that it was all to the point.</p>
<p>But Sergey Ivanovitch shrugged his shoulders.</p>
<p>“Well, what do you mean to say, then?”</p>
<p>“I simply mean to say that those rights that touch me ... my interest, I
shall always defend to the best of my ability; that when they made raids on us
students, and the police read our letters, I was ready to defend those rights
to the utmost, to defend my rights to education and freedom. I can understand
compulsory military service, which affects my children, my brothers, and
myself, I am ready to deliberate on what concerns me; but deliberating on how
to spend forty thousand roubles of district council money, or judging the
half-witted Alioshka—I don’t understand, and I can’t do
it.”</p>
<p>Konstantin Levin spoke as though the floodgates of his speech had burst open.
Sergey Ivanovitch smiled.</p>
<p>“But tomorrow it’ll be your turn to be tried; would it have suited
your tastes better to be tried in the old criminal tribunal?”</p>
<p>“I’m not going to be tried. I shan’t murder anybody, and
I’ve no need of it. Well, I tell you what,” he went on, flying off
again to a subject quite beside the point, “our district self-government
and all the rest of it—it’s just like the birch branches we stick
in the ground on Trinity Day, for instance, to look like a copse which has
grown up of itself in Europe, and I can’t gush over these birch branches
and believe in them.”</p>
<p>Sergey Ivanovitch merely shrugged his shoulders, as though to express his
wonder how the birch branches had come into their argument at that point,
though he did really understand at once what his brother meant.</p>
<p>“Excuse me, but you know one really can’t argue in that way,”
he observed.</p>
<p>But Konstantin Levin wanted to justify himself for the failing, of which he was
conscious, of lack of zeal for the public welfare, and he went on.</p>
<p>“I imagine,” he said, “that no sort of activity is likely to
be lasting if it is not founded on self-interest, that’s a universal
principle, a philosophical principle,” he said, repeating the word
“philosophical” with determination, as though wishing to show that
he had as much right as anyone else to talk of philosophy.</p>
<p>Sergey Ivanovitch smiled. “He too has a philosophy of his own at the
service of his natural tendencies,” he thought.</p>
<p>“Come, you’d better let philosophy alone,” he said.
“The chief problem of the philosophy of all ages consists just in finding
the indispensable connection which exists between individual and social
interests. But that’s not to the point; what is to the point is a
correction I must make in your comparison. The birches are not simply stuck in,
but some are sown and some are planted, and one must deal carefully with them.
It’s only those peoples that have an intuitive sense of what’s of
importance and significance in their institutions, and know how to value them,
that have a future before them—it’s only those peoples that one can
truly call historical.”</p>
<p>And Sergey Ivanovitch carried the subject into the regions of philosophical
history where Konstantin Levin could not follow him, and showed him all the
incorrectness of his view.</p>
<p>“As for your dislike of it, excuse my saying so, that’s simply our
Russian sloth and old serf-owner’s ways, and I’m convinced that in
you it’s a temporary error and will pass.”</p>
<p>Konstantin was silent. He felt himself vanquished on all sides, but he felt at
the same time that what he wanted to say was unintelligible to his brother.
Only he could not make up his mind whether it was unintelligible because he was
not capable of expressing his meaning clearly, or because his brother would not
or could not understand him. But he did not pursue the speculation, and without
replying, he fell to musing on a quite different and personal matter.</p>
<p>Sergey Ivanovitch wound up the last line, untied the horse, and they drove off.</p>
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