Page:The Boy Travellers in the Russian Empire.djvu/187

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SEEING THE EMPEROR.
181

ly to church. * * * The burgher class and the merchant class have been equally benefited by the change. A good many peasants have become burghers, and a good many burghers merchants. All the domestic and useful trades have been quickened into life. More shoes are worn, more carts are wanted, more cabins are built. Hats, coats, and cloaks are in higher demand; the bakeries and breweries find more to do; the teacher gets more pupils, and the banker has more customers on his books.'"[1]

With a few more words upon serfdom and its relation to other forms of slavery, the subject was dropped, and our friends went out for a walk.


ALEXANDER II., THE LIBERATOR OF THE SERFS.

As they passed along the Nevski they were suddenly involved in a crowd, and half forced into the door of a shop which they had visited the day before. They were recognized by the proprietor, who invited them to enter and make themselves comfortable. "The Emperor is coming in a few minutes," he explained, "and the police are clearing the way for him."


  1. "Free Russia," by Hepworth Dixon, p. 275.