The Decade of The 1840's is one of the most fascinating in the whole of Russian literature, and one of the least understood. Historians of literature, in patronizing perspective, are wont to view it as a “pre-“ period, as a preparation to the great age of the novel which was to follow. Since the Russian novel was not fashioned at mid-century by the accidental confluence of three of four writers of genius, beginnings must be sought: the forties, the age of the Natural School, serve the purpose admirably. The Natural School writers, so-called because of their fondness for depicting “life in the raw,” laid the foundation for the realistic novel of mid-century. Their negative, critical approach (derived chiefly from the satiric naturalism of Gogol) was responsible for the creation of a homogeneous body of literature: philanthropic stories on the poor, the physiological sketch, the social criticism of Belinskij, and the first successes of Turgenev, Dostoevsky, and Nekrasov. The movement was short-lived, and produced few literary works of great intrinsic merit.