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STUDYING LINE AND COLOUR IN RUSSIA

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neck hung strings of coral and amber beads. There was indeed a decorative woman!
As for her background, it was simple enough to throw into relief the brilliant vision
that she was. Not, however, a scheme of interior decoration to copy! The walls
were whitewashed; a large stove of masonry was built into one corner, and four
beds and a cradle stood on the other side of the room, over which hung in a row
five virgins, the central one being the Black Virgin beloved by the Poles. The
legend is that the original was painted during the life of the Virgin, on a panel of
dark wood. Here, too, was the marriage chest, decorated with a crude design in
bright colours. The children, three or four of them, ran about in the national
costume, miniatures of their mother, but barefoot.
It was the same in Hungary, when we were taken by the mayor of a Magyar town to
visit the characteristic farmhouse of a highly prosperous farmer, said to be worth
two hundred thousand dollars. The table was laid in the end of a room having four
beds in it. On inquiring later, we were told that they were not ordinarily used by the
family, but were heaped with the reserve bedding. In other words, they were
recognised by the natives as indicating a degree of affluence, and were a bit of
ostentation, not the overcrowding of necessity.
CHAPTER XXII
STUDYING LINE AND COLOUR IN RUSSIA
ROM Hungary we continued our quest of line and colour of folk
costume into Russia.
Strangely enough, Russia throws off the imperial yoke of autocracy,
declaring for democratic principles, at the very moment we undertake to put into
words the vivid picturesqueness resulting largely from the causes of this astounding
revolution. Have you been in Russia? Have you seen with your own eyes any phase
of the violent contrasts which at last have caused the worm to turn? Our object
being to study national characteristics as expressed in folk costume, folk song, folk
dance, traditional customs and fêtes, we consulted students of these subjects, whom
we chanced to meet in London, Paris, Vienna and Buda Pest, with the result that we
turned our faces toward southern or "Little" Russia, as the part least affected by
cosmopolitan influences.
Kiev was our headquarters, and it is well to say at once that we found what we
sought,--ample opportunity to observe the genuine Russian, the sturdy, dogged,
plodding son of toil, who, more than any other European peasant seems a part of
the soil, which in sullen persistency he tills. We knew already the Russians of
Petrograd and Moscow; one meets them in Paris, London, Vienna, at German and
Austrian Cures and on the Riviera. They are everywhere and always distinctive by
reason of their Slav temperament; a magnetic race quality which is Asiatic in its
essence. We recognise it, we are stirred by it, we are drawn to it in their literature,
their music, their painting and in the Russian people themselves. The quality is an
integral part of Russian nature; polishing merely increases its attraction as with a
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gem. One instance of this is the folk melody as treated by Tschaikowsky compared
with its simple form as sung or danced by the peasant.
PLATE XXVIII
A skating costume worn by Miss Weld of
Boston, holder of the Woman's Figure
Skating Championship.
This photograph was taken in New York on
March 23, 1917, when amateurs contested for
the cup and Miss Weld won--this time over
the men.
The  costume  of  wine-coloured  velvet
trimmed with mole-skin, a small close toque
to match, was one of the most appropriate and
attractive models of 1916-1917.
Courtesy of New York Herald Modern Skating
Costume 1917 Winner of Amateur Championship of
Fancy Skating
Some of the Russian women of the fashionable world are very decorative. Our first
impression of this type was in Paris, at the Russian Church on Christmas (or was it
some other holy day?) when to the amazement of the uninitiated the Russian
women of the aristocracy appeared at the morning service hatless and in full
evening dress, wearing jewels as if for a function at some secular court. Their
masculine escorts appeared in full regalia, the light of the altar candles adding
mystery to the glitter of gold lace and jewels. Those occasions are picturesque in
the extreme.
The congregation stands, as in the Jewish synagogues, and those of highest rank are
nearest the altar, invariably ablaze with gold, silver and precious stones, while on
occasions the priest wears cloth of gold.
In Paris this background and the whole scene was accepted as a part of the pageant
of that city, but in Kiev it was different. There we got the other side of the picture;
the man and the woman who are really Russia, the element that finds an outlet in
the folk music, for its age-old rebellious submission. One hears the soul of the
Russian pulsating in the continued reiteration of the same theme; it is like the
endless treadmill of a life without vistas. We were looking at the Russia of Maxim
Gorky, the Russia that made Tolstoy a reformer; that has now forced its Czar to
abdicate.
We reached Kiev just before the Easter of the Greek Church, the season when the
pilgrims, often as many as fifty thousand of them, tramp over the frozen roads from
all parts of the empire to expiate their sins, kneeling at the shrine of one of their
mummied, sainted bishops.
The men and women alike, clad in grimy sheepskin coats, moved like cattle in
straggling droves, over the roads which lead to Kiev. From a distance one cannot
tell man from woman, but as they come closer, one sees that the woman has a
bright kerchief tied round her head, and red or blue peasant embroidery dribbles
below her sheepskin coat. She is as stocky as a Shetland pony and her face is
weather-beaten, with high cheekbones and brown eyes. The man wears a black
astrachan conical cap and his hair is long and bushy, from rubbing bear grease into
it. He walks with a crooked staff, biblical in style, and carries his worldly goods in
a small bundle flung over his shoulder. The woman carries her own small burden.
As they shuffle past, a stench arises from the human herd. It comes from the
sheepskin, which is worked in, slept in, and, what is more, often inherited from a
parent who had also worn it as his winter hide. Added to the smell of the sheepskin
is that of an unwashed human, and the reek of stale food, for the poorest of the
Russian peasants have no chimneys to their houses. They cannot afford to let the
costly heat escape.
Kiev, the holy city and capital of Ancient Russia, climbs from its ancestral
beginnings, on the banks of the River Dneiper, up the steep sides and over the
summit of a commanding hilltop, crowned by an immense gold cross, illumined
with electricity by night, to flash its message of hope to foot-sore pilgrims. The
driver of our drosky drove us over the rough cobbles so rapidly, despite the hill,
that we were almost overturned. It is the manner of Russian drosky drivers. The
cathedral, our goal, was snowy-white, with frescoes on the outer walls, onion-
shaped domes of bronze turned green; or gold, or blue with stars of gold.
We entered and found the body of the church well filled by peasants, women and
men in sheepskin. One poor doe-eyed creature crouched to press his forehead
twenty times at least on the stone floor of the church. Eagerly, like a flock of sheep,
they all pushed forward to where a richly-robed priest held a cross of gold for each
to kiss, taking their proffered kopeks.