On the 12th of August, 18-
(just three days after my tenth birthday, when I had
been given such wonderful presents), I was awakened
at seven o’clock in the morning by Karl Ivanitch
slapping the wall close to my head with a fly-flap
made of sugar paper and a stick. He did this so
roughly that he hit the image of my patron saint suspended
to the oaken back of my bed, and the dead fly fell
down on my curls. I peeped out from under the
coverlet, steadied the still shaking image with my
hand, flicked the dead fly on to the floor, and gazed
at Karl Ivanitch with sleepy, wrathful eyes.
He, in a parti-coloured wadded dressing-gown fastened
about the waist with a wide belt of the same material,
a red knitted cap adorned with a tassel, and soft
slippers of goat skin, went on walking round the walls
and taking aim at, and slapping, flies.
“Suppose,” I thought to
myself, “that I am only a small boy, yet why
should he disturb me? Why does he not go killing
flies around Woloda’s bed? No; Woloda is
older than I, and I am the youngest of the family,
so he torments me. That is what he thinks of
all day long-how to tease me. He knows
very well that he has woken me up and frightened me,
but he pretends not to notice it. Disgusting
brute! And his dressing-gown and cap and tassel
too-they are all of them disgusting.”
While I was thus inwardly venting
my wrath upon Karl Ivanitch, he had passed to his
own bedstead, looked at his watch (which hung suspended
in a little shoe sewn with bugles), and deposited
the fly-flap on a nail, then, evidently in the most
cheerful mood possible, he turned round to us.
“Get up, children! It is
quite time, and your mother is already in the drawing-room,”
he exclaimed in his strong German accent. Then
he crossed over to me, sat down at my feet, and took
his snuff-box out of his pocket. I pretended
to be asleep. Karl Ivanitch sneezed, wiped his
nose, flicked his fingers, and began amusing himself
by teasing me and tickling my toes as he said with
a smile, “Well, well, little lazy one!”
For all my dread of being tickled,
I determined not to get out of bed or to answer him,
but hid my head deeper in the pillow, kicked out with
all my strength, and strained every nerve to keep from
laughing.
“How kind he is, and how fond
of us!” I thought to myself. “Yet
to think that I could be hating him so just now!”
I felt angry, both with myself and
with Karl Ivanitch, I wanted to laugh and to cry at
the same time, for my nerves were all on edge.
“Leave me alone, Karl!”
I exclaimed at length, with tears in my eyes, as I
raised my head from beneath the bed-clothes.
Karl Ivanitch was taken aback, He
left off tickling my feet, and asked me kindly what
the matter was, Had I had a disagreeable dream?
His good German face and the sympathy with which he
sought to know the cause of my tears made them flow
the faster. I felt conscience-stricken, and could
not understand how, only a minute ago, I had been hating
Karl, and thinking his dressing-gown and cap and tassel
disgusting. On the contrary, they looked eminently
lovable now. Even the tassel seemed another token
of his goodness. I replied that I was crying because
I had had a bad dream, and had seen Mamma dead and
being buried. Of course it was a mere invention,
since I did not remember having dreamt anything at
all that night, but the truth was that Karl’s
sympathy as he tried to comfort and reassure me had
gradually made me believe that I had dreamt such
a horrible dream, and so weep the more-though
from a different cause to the one he imagined.
When Karl Ivanitch had left me, I
sat up in bed and proceeded to draw my stockings over
my little feet. The tears had quite dried now,
yet the mournful thought of the invented dream was
still haunting me a little. Presently Uncle [This
term is often applied by children to old servants
in Russia] Nicola came in-a neat little
man who was always grave, methodical, and respectful,
as well as a great friend of Karl’s, He brought
with him our clothes and boots-at least,
boots for Woloda, and for myself the old detestable,
be-ribanded shoes. In his presence I felt ashamed
to cry, and, moreover, the morning sun was shining
so gaily through the window, and Woloda, standing
at the washstand as he mimicked Maria Ivanovna (my
sister’s governess), was laughing so loud and
so long, that even the serious Nicola-a
towel over his shoulder, the soap in one hand, and
the basin in the other-could not help smiling
as he said, “Will you please let me wash you,
Vladimir Petrovitch?” I had cheered up completely.
“Are you nearly ready?”
came Karl’s voice from the schoolroom. The
tone of that voice sounded stern now, and had nothing
in it of the kindness which had just touched me so
much. In fact, in the schoolroom Karl was altogether
a different man from what he was at other times.
There he was the tutor. I washed and dressed
myself hurriedly, and, a brush still in my hand as
I smoothed my wet hair, answered to his call.
Karl, with spectacles on nose and a book in his hand,
was sitting, as usual, between the door and one of
the windows. To the left of the door were two
shelves-one of them the children’s
(that is to say, ours), and the other one Karl’s
own. Upon ours were heaped all sorts of books-lesson
books and play books-some standing up and
some lying down. The only two standing decorously
against the wall were two large volumes of a Histoire
des Voyages, in red binding. On that shelf
could be seen books thick and thin and books large
and small, as well as covers without books and books
without covers, since everything got crammed up together
anyhow when play time arrived and we were told to put
the “library” (as Karl called these shelves)
in order The collection of books on his own shelf
was, if not so numerous as ours, at least more varied.
Three of them in particular I remember, namely, a
German pamphlet (minus a cover) on Manuring Cabbages
in Kitchen-Gardens, a History of the Seven Years’
War (bound in parchment and burnt at one corner), and
a Course of Hydrostatics. Though Karl passed
so much of his time in reading that he had injured
his sight by doing so, he never read anything beyond
these books and The Northern Bee.
Another article on Karl’s shelf
I remember well. This was a round piece of cardboard
fastened by a screw to a wooden stand, with a sort
of comic picture of a lady and a hairdresser glued
to the cardboard. Karl was very clever at fixing
pieces of cardboard together, and had devised this
contrivance for shielding his weak eyes from any very
strong light.
I can see him before me now-the
tall figure in its wadded dressing-gown and red cap
(a few grey hairs visible beneath the latter) sitting
beside the table; the screen with the hairdresser
shading his face; one hand holding a book, and the
other one resting on the arm of the chair. Before
him lie his watch, with a huntsman painted on the dial,
a check cotton handkerchief, a round black snuff-box,
and a green spectacle-case, The neatness and orderliness
of all these articles show clearly that Karl Ivanitch
has a clear conscience and a quiet mind.
Sometimes, when tired of running about
the salon downstairs, I would steal on tiptoe to the
schoolroom and find Karl sitting alone in his armchair
as, with a grave and quiet expression on his face,
he perused one of his favourite books. Yet sometimes,
also, there were moments when he was not reading,
and when the spectacles had slipped down his large
aquiline nose, and the blue, half-closed eyes and faintly
smiling lips seemed to be gazing before them with
a curious expression, All would be quiet in the room-not
a sound being audible save his regular breathing and
the ticking of the watch with the hunter painted on
the dial. He would not see me, and I would stand
at the door and think: “Poor, poor old
man! There are many of us, and we can play together
and be happy, but he sits there all alone, and has
nobody to be fond of him. Surely he speaks truth
when he says that he is an orphan. And the story
of his life, too-how terrible it is!
I remember him telling it to Nicola, How dreadful
to be in his position!” Then I would feel so
sorry for him that I would go to him, and take his
hand, and say, “Dear Karl Ivanitch!” and
he would be visibly delighted whenever I spoke to him
like this, and would look much brighter.
On the second wall of the schoolroom
hung some maps-mostly torn, but glued together
again by Karl’s hand. On the third wall
(in the middle of which stood the door) hung, on one
side of the door, a couple of rulers (one of them
ours-much bescratched, and the other one
his-quite a new one), with, on the further
side of the door, a blackboard on which our more serious
faults were marked by circles and our lesser faults
by crosses. To the left of the blackboard was
the corner in which we had to kneel when naughty.
How well I remember that corner-the shutter
on the stove, the ventilator above it, and the noise
which it made when turned! Sometimes I would
be made to stay in that corner till my back and knees
were aching all over, and I would think to myself.
“Has Karl Ivanitch forgotten me? He goes
on sitting quietly in his arm-chair and reading his
Hydrostatics, while I !” Then, to remind
him of my presence, I would begin gently turning the
ventilator round. Or scratching some plaster
off the wall; but if by chance an extra large piece
fell upon the floor, the fright of it was worse than
any punishment. I would glance round at Karl,
but he would still be sitting there quietly, book
in hand, and pretending that he had noticed nothing.
In the middle of the room stood a
table, covered with a torn black oilcloth so much
cut about with penknives that the edge of the table
showed through. Round the table stood unpainted
chairs which, through use, had attained a high degree
of polish. The fourth and last wall contained
three windows, from the first of which the view was
as follows, Immediately beneath it there ran a high
road on which every irregularity, every pebble, every
rut was known and dear to me. Beside the road
stretched a row of lime-trees, through which glimpses
could be caught of a wattled fence, with a meadow
with farm buildings on one side of it and a wood on
the other-the whole bounded by the keeper’s
hut at the further end of the meadow, The next window
to the right overlooked the part of the terrace where
the “grownups” of the family used to sit
before luncheon. Sometimes, when Karl was correcting
our exercises, I would look out of that window and
see Mamma’s dark hair and the backs of some
persons with her, and hear the murmur of their talking
and laughter. Then I would feel vexed that I
could not be there too, and think to myself, “When
am I going to be grown up, and to have no more lessons,
but sit with the people whom I love instead of with
these horrid dialogues in my hand?” Then my
anger would change to sadness, and I would fall into
such a reverie that I never heard Karl when he scolded
me for my mistakes.
At last, on the morning of which I
am speaking, Karl Ivanitch took off his dressing-gown,
put on his blue frockcoat with its creased and crumpled
shoulders, adjusted his tie before the looking-glass,
and took us down to greet Mamma.