Page:The National Geographic Magazine Vol 16 1905.djvu/374

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The National Geographic Magazine

Now there has come a temporary hush. For a time the gaze is diverted to that forlorn squadron plowing its uncertain way through unknown and treacherous waters. One signal victory of Rodjest- vensky's fleet may reverse all that has gone before, retrieve all the battles lost, redeem autocracy and the Tsar. In the anguish of suspense the autocrat and the nation listen and wait.

THE PRESENT TSAR

Upon a train some days ago I sat near two gentlemen engaged in earnest con- versation. They were talking about a third, apparently a friend of their youth. They seemed to be summing up his life and character. Said one, "He was always hampered by his inheritance." Said the other, "Well, I think he blundered along just as well as he knew how, "Then I caught another sentence, "He never knew whom he was able to trust." Their conversation ended with, "He would have been a great deal happier if he had been a clerk in New York." Despite the distance in race and rank, those random remarks epitomize the life story of Nicolas II.

Far happier for him a simple house in Yonkers or Harlem than the sumptuous halls of the Winter Palace. Better fitted is he for the routine of an office and a desk than for the perils and responsibilities of a crown. Then, when the day's work is done, what joy to reach his home and toss his children in his arms, and picnic on a holiday or a Sunday in the suburbs with his family. Such, they tell us, is the gentle, homely, wife loving nature of the present Tsar. Whatever the destiny of the autocrat and of the autocracy, the Russian people remain. Rudyard Kipling, in "The Man Who Was"—perhaps the most powerful story Kipling ever wrote—puts upon the lips of Dirkovitch the prophecy of that for which the centuries have been waiting: "The Czar! Posh! I snap my fingers—I snap my fingers at him. Do I believe in him? No! But the Slav who has done nothing, him I believe. Seventy—how much?—millions that have done nothing—not one thing. Napoleon was an episode! . . .

Hear you, old peoples, we have done nothing in the world — out here. All our work is to do : and it shall be done, old peoples. Get away! Seventy millions — get away, you old people ! "[1]

  1. Some good books on Russia are: "Greater Russia." Wirt Gerrare. Macmillan Co. 1904. Several chapters deal with Russia, but the larger portion of the work relates to Siberia and the Amur territory. $3.00. "All the Russias." Henry Norman. Charles Scribner's Sons. 1902. A very satisfactory account of the resources and general administration of Russia. $4.00. "The Great Siberian Railway." M. M. Shoemaker. G. P. Putnam's Sons. 1903. "Russia." Sir D. M. Wallace. Henry Holt. $2.00. The best general account of Russia in the English language. "Russia in Asia, 1558-1899." A. S. Krausse. Henry Holt. 1899. $4.00. A history of Russian advance across Asia. "Story of Russia." W. R. Morfill. G. P. Putnam's Sons. 1890. (Story of Nations' series.) $1.50. "The Russian Advance." A. J. Beveridge. Harper Bros. 1903. $2.50. A graphic portrayal of the causes of the sweep of Russia across Asia.