[A Short History of Russia by Mary Platt Parmele]@TWC D-Link book
A Short History of Russia

CHAPTER XXV
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In their detestation of one crime they committed a worse one.

They conspired against the life of civilization--as if it were not better to be ruled by despots than assassins, as if a bad government were not better than none! The existence of Nihilism may be explained, though not extenuated.

Can anyone estimate the effect upon a single human being to have known that a father, brother, son, sister, or wife has perished under the knout?
Could such a person ever again be capable of reasoning calmly or sanely upon "political reforms"?
If there were any slumbering tiger-instincts in this half-Asiatic people, was not this enough to awaken them?
There were many who had suffered this, and there were thousands more who at that very time had friends, lovers, relatives, those dearer to them than life, who were enduring day by day the tortures of exile, subject to the brutal punishments of irresponsible officials.

It was this which had converted hundreds of the nobility into conspirators--this which had made Sophia Perovskaya, the daughter of one of the highest officials in the land, give the signal for the murder of the Emperor, and then, scorning mercy, insist that she should have the privilege of dying upon the gallows with the rest.
But tiger-instincts, whatever their cause, must be extinguished.

They cannot coexist with civilization.


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