Why do I so persistently paint the
poverty, the imperfections of Russian life, and delve
into the remotest depths, the most retired holes and
corners, of our Empire for my subjects? The answer
is that there is nothing else to be done when an author’s
idiosyncrasy happens to incline him that way.
So again we find ourselves in a retired spot.
But what a spot!
Imagine, if you can, a mountain range
like a gigantic fortress, with embrasures and
bastions which appear to soar a thousand versts towards
the heights of heaven, and, towering grandly over a
boundless expanse of plain, are broken up into precipitous,
overhanging limestone cliffs. Here and there
those cliffs are seamed with water-courses and gullies,
while at other points they are rounded off into spurs
of green spurs now coated with fleece-like
tufts of young undergrowth, now studded with the stumps
of felled trees, now covered with timber which has,
by some miracle, escaped the woodman’s axe.
Also, a river winds awhile between its banks, then
leaves the meadow land, divides into runlets (all
flashing in the sun like fire), plunges, re-united,
into the midst of a thicket of elder, birth, and pine,
and, lastly, speeds triumphantly past bridges and
mills and weirs which seem to be lying in wait for
it at every turn.
At one particular spot the steep flank
of the mountain range is covered with billowy verdure
of denser growth than the rest; and here the aid of
skilful planting, added to the shelter afforded by
a rugged ravine, has enabled the flora of north and
south so to be brought together that, twined about
with sinuous hop-tendrils, the oak, the spruce fir,
the wild pear, the maple, the cherry, the thorn, and
the mountain ash either assist or check one another’s
growth, and everywhere cover the declivity with their
straggling profusion. Also, at the edge of the
summit there can be seen mingling with the green of
the trees the red roofs of a manorial homestead, while
behind the upper stories of the mansion proper and
its carved balcony and a great semi-circular window
there gleam the tiles and gables of some peasants’
huts. Lastly, over this combination of trees
and roofs there rises overtopping everything
with its gilded, sparkling steeple an old
village church. On each of its pinnacles a cross
of carved gilt is stayed with supports of similar gilding
and design; with the result that from a distance the
gilded portions have the effect of hanging without
visible agency in the air. And the whole the
three successive tiers of woodland, roofs, and crosses
whole lies exquisitely mirrored in the river
below, where hollow willows, grotesquely shaped (some
of them rooted on the river’s banks, and some
in the water itself, and all drooping their branches
until their leaves have formed a tangle with the water
lilies which float on the surface), seem to be gazing
at the marvellous reflection at their feet.
Thus the view from below is beautiful
indeed. But the view from above is even better.
No guest, no visitor, could stand on the balcony of
the mansion and remain indifferent. So boundless
is the panorama revealed that surprise would cause
him to catch at his breath, and exclaim: “Lord
of Heaven, but what a prospect!” Beyond meadows
studded with spinneys and water-mills lie forests
belted with green; while beyond, again, there can
be seen showing through the slightly misty air strips
of yellow heath, and, again, wide-rolling forests
(as blue as the sea or a cloud), and more heath, paler
than the first, but still yellow. Finally, on
the far horizon a range of chalk-topped hills gleams
white, even in dull weather, as though it were lightened
with perpetual sunshine; and here and there on the
dazzling whiteness of its lower slopes some plaster-like,
nebulous patches represent far-off villages which lie
too remote for the eye to discern their details.
Indeed, only when the sunlight touches a steeple to
gold does one realise that each such patch is a human
settlement. Finally, all is wrapped in an immensity
of silence which even the far, faint echoes of persons
singing in the void of the plain cannot shatter.
Even after gazing at the spectacle
for a couple of hours or so, the visitor would still
find nothing to say, save: “Lord of Heaven,
but what a prospect!” Then who is the dweller
in, the proprietor of, this manor a manor
to which, as to an impregnable fortress, entrance cannot
be gained from the side where we have been standing,
but only from the other approach, where a few scattered
oaks offer hospitable welcome to the visitor, and
then, spreading above him their spacious branches (as
in friendly embrace), accompany him to the façade of
the mansion whose top we have been regarding from
the reverse aspect, but which now stands frontwise
on to us, and has, on one side of it, a row of peasants’
huts with red tiles and carved gables, and, on the
other, the village church, with those glittering golden
crosses and gilded open-work charms which seem to
hang suspended in the air? Yes, indeed! to
what fortunate individual does this corner of the
world belong? It belongs to Andrei Ivanovitch
Tientietnikov, landowner of the canton of Tremalakhan,
and, withal, a bachelor of about thirty.
Should my lady readers ask of me what
manner of man is Tientietnikov, and what are his attributes
and peculiarities, I should refer them to his neighbours.
Of these, a member of the almost extinct tribe of
intelligent staff officers on the retired list once
summed up Tientietnikov in the phrase, “He is
an absolute blockhead;” while a General who
resided ten versts away was heard to remark that “he
is a young man who, though not exactly a fool, has
at least too much crowded into his head. I myself
might have been of use to him, for not only do I maintain
certain connections with St. Petersburg, but also ”
And the General left his sentence unfinished.
Thirdly, a captain-superintendent of rural police
happened to remark in the course of conversation:
“To-morrow I must go and see Tientietnikov about
his arrears.” Lastly, a peasant of Tientietnikov’s
own village, when asked what his barin was like, returned
no answer at all. All of which would appear to
show that Tientietnikov was not exactly looked upon
with favour.
To speak dispassionately, however,
he was not a bad sort of fellow merely
a star-gazer; and since the world contains many watchers
of the skies, why should Tientietnikov not have been
one of them? However, let me describe in detail
a specimen day of his existence one that
will closely resemble the rest, and then the reader
will be enabled to judge of Tientietnikov’s
character, and how far his life corresponded to the
beauties of nature with which he lived surrounded.
On the morning of the specimen day
in question he awoke very late, and, raising himself
to a sitting posture, rubbed his eyes. And since
those eyes were small, the process of rubbing them
occupied a very long time, and throughout its continuance
there stood waiting by the door his valet, Mikhailo,
armed with a towel and basin. For one hour, for
two hours, did poor Mikhailo stand there: then
he departed to the kitchen, and returned to find his
master still rubbing his eyes as he sat on the bed.
At length, however, Tientietnikov rose, washed himself,
donned a dressing-gown, and moved into the drawing-room
for morning tea, coffee, cocoa, and warm milk; of
all of which he partook but sparingly, while munching
a piece of bread, and scattering tobacco ash with complete
insouciance. Two hours did he sit over this meal,
then poured himself out another cup of the rapidly
cooling tea, and walked to the window. This faced
the courtyard, and outside it, as usual, there took
place the following daily altercation between a serf
named Grigory (who purported to act as butler) and
the housekeeper, Perfilievna.
Grigory. Ah, you nuisance, you
good-for-nothing, you had better hold your stupid
tongue.
Perfilievna. Yes; and don’t you wish that
I would?
Grigory. What? You so thick
with that bailiff of yours, you housekeeping jade!
Perfilievna. Nay, he is as big
a thief as you are. Do you think the barin doesn’t
know you? And there he is! He must have heard
everything!
Grigory. Where?
Perfilievna. There sitting by the
window, and looking at us!
Next, to complete the hubbub, a serf
child which had been clouted by its mother broke out
into a bawl, while a borzoi puppy which had happened
to get splashed with boiling water by the cook fell
to yelping vociferously. In short, the place
soon became a babel of shouts and squeals, and, after
watching and listening for a time, the barin found
it so impossible to concentrate his mind upon anything
that he sent out word that the noise would have to
be abated.
The next item was that, a couple of
hours before luncheon time, he withdrew to his study,
to set about employing himself upon a weighty work
which was to consider Russia from every point of view:
from the political, from the philosophical, and from
the religious, as well as to resolve various problems
which had arisen to confront the Empire, and to define
clearly the great future to which the country stood
ordained. In short, it was to be the species
of compilation in which the man of the day so much
delights. Yet the colossal undertaking had progressed
but little beyond the sphere of projection, since,
after a pen had been gnawed awhile, and a few strokes
had been committed to paper, the whole would be laid
aside in favour of the reading of some book; and that
reading would continue also during luncheon and be
followed by the lighting of a pipe, the playing of
a solitary game of chess, and the doing of more or
less nothing for the rest of the day.
The foregoing will give the reader
a pretty clear idea of the manner in which it was
possible for this man of thirty-three to waste his
time. Clad constantly in slippers and a dressing-gown,
Tientietnikov never went out, never indulged in any
form of dissipation, and never walked upstairs.
Nothing did he care for fresh air, and would bestow
not a passing glance upon all those beauties of the
countryside which moved visitors to such ecstatic
admiration. From this the reader will see that
Andrei Ivanovitch Tientietnikov belonged to that band
of sluggards whom we always have with us, and who,
whatever be their present appellation, used to be
known by the nicknames of “lollopers,”
“bed pressers,” and “marmots.”
Whether the type is a type originating at birth, or
a type resulting from untoward circumstances in later
life, it is impossible to say. A better course
than to attempt to answer that question would be to
recount the story of Tientietnikov’s boyhood
and upbringing.
Everything connected with the latter
seemed to promise success, for at twelve years of
age the boy keen-witted, but dreamy of temperament,
and inclined to delicacy was sent to an
educational establishment presided over by an exceptional
type of master. The idol of his pupils, and the
admiration of his assistants, Alexander Petrovitch
was gifted with an extraordinary measure of good sense.
How thoroughly he knew the peculiarities of the Russian
of his day! How well he understood boys!
How capable he was of drawing them out! Not a
practical joker in the school but, after perpetrating
a prank, would voluntarily approach his preceptor
and make to him free confession. True, the preceptor
would put a stern face upon the matter, yet the culprit
would depart with head held higher, not lower, than
before, since in Alexander Petrovitch there was something
which heartened something which seemed to
say to a delinquent: “Forward you!
Rise to your feet again, even though you have fallen!”
Not lectures on good behaviour was it, therefore, that
fell from his lips, but rather the injunction, “I
want to see intelligence, and nothing else. The
boy who devotes his attention to becoming clever will
never play the fool, for under such circumstances,
folly disappears of itself.” And so folly
did, for the boy who failed to strive in the desired
direction incurred the contempt of all his comrades,
and even dunces and fools of senior standing did not
dare to raise a finger when saluted by their juniors
with opprobrious epithets. Yet “This is
too much,” certain folk would say to Alexander.
“The result will be that your students will
turn out prigs.” “But no,” he
would reply. “Not at all. You see,
I make it my principle to keep the incapables
for a single term only, since that is enough for them;
but to the clever ones I allot a double course of
instruction.” And, true enough, any lad
of brains was retained for this finishing course.
Yet he did not repress all boyish playfulness, since
he declared it to be as necessary as a rash to a doctor,
inasmuch as it enabled him to diagnose what lay hidden
within.
Consequently, how the boys loved him!
Never was there such an attachment between master
and pupils. And even later, during the foolish
years, when foolish things attract, the measure of
affection which Alexander Petrovitch retained was
extraordinary. In fact, to the day of his death,
every former pupil would celebrate the birthday of
his late master by raising his glass in gratitude
to the mentor dead and buried then close
his eyelids upon the tears which would come trickling
through them. Even the slightest word of encouragement
from Alexander Petrovitch could throw a lad into a
transport of tremulous joy, and arouse in him an honourable
emulation of his fellows. Boys of small capacity
he did not long retain in his establishment; whereas
those who possessed exceptional talent he put through
an extra course of schooling. This senior class a
class composed of specially-selected pupils was
a very different affair from what usually obtains
in other colleges. Only when a boy had attained
its ranks did Alexander demand of him what other masters
indiscreetly require of mere infants namely
the superior frame of mind which, while never indulging
in mockery, can itself bear ridicule, and disregard
the fool, and keep its temper, and repress itself,
and eschew revenge, and calmly, proudly retain its
tranquillity of soul. In short, whatever avails
to form a boy into a man of assured character, that
did Alexander Petrovitch employ during the pupil’s
youth, as well as constantly put him to the test.
How well he understood the art of life!
Of assistant tutors he kept but few,
since most of the necessary instruction he imparted
in person, and, without pedantic terminology and inflated
diction and views, could so transmit to his listeners
the inmost spirit of a lesson that even the youngest
present absorbed its essential elements. Also,
of studies he selected none but those which may help
a boy to become a good citizen; and therefore most
of the lectures which he delivered consisted of discourses
on what may be awaiting a youth, as well as of such
démarcations of life’s field that the pupil,
though seated, as yet, only at the desk, could beforehand
bear his part in that field both in thought and spirit.
Nor did the master conceal anything. That
is to say, without mincing words, he invariably set
before his hearers the sorrows and the difficulties
which may confront a man, the trials and the temptations
which may beset him. And this he did in terms
as though, in every possible calling and capacity,
he himself had experienced the same. Consequently,
either the vigorous development of self-respect or
the constant stimulus of the master’s eye (which
seemed to say to the pupil, “Forward!” that
word which has become so familiar to the contemporary
Russian, that word which has worked such wonders upon
his sensitive temperament); one or the other, I repeat,
would from the first cause the pupil to tackle difficulties,
and only difficulties, and to hunger for prowess only
where the path was arduous, and obstacles were many,
and it was necessary to display the utmost strength
of mind. Indeed, few completed the course of
which I have spoken without issuing therefrom reliable,
seasoned fighters who could keep their heads in the
most embarrassing of official positions, and at times
when older and wiser men, distracted with the annoyances
of life, had either abandoned everything or, grown
slack and indifferent, had surrendered to the bribe-takers
and the rascals. In short, no ex-pupil of Alexander
Petrovitch ever wavered from the right road, but,
familiar with life and with men, armed with the weapons
of prudence, exerted a powerful influence upon wrongdoers.
For a long time past the ardent young
Tientietnikov’s excitable heart had also beat
at the thought that one day he might attain the senior
class described. And, indeed, what better teacher
could he have had befall him than its preceptor?
Yet just at the moment when he had been transferred
thereto, just at the moment when he had reached the
coveted position, did his instructor come suddenly
by his death! This was indeed a blow for the
boy indeed a terrible initial loss!
In his eyes everything connected with the school seemed
to undergo a change the chief reason being
the fact that to the place of the deceased headmaster
there succeeded a certain Thedor Ivanovitch, who at
once began to insist upon certain external rules,
and to demand of the boys what ought rightly to have
been demanded only of adults. That is to say,
since the lads’ frank and open demeanour savoured
to him only of lack of discipline, he announced (as
though in deliberate spite of his predecessor) that
he cared nothing for progress and intellect, but that
heed was to be paid only to good behaviour. Yet,
curiously enough, good behaviour was just what he
never obtained, for every kind of secret prank became
the rule; and while, by day, there reigned restraint
and conspiracy, by night there began to take place
chambering and wantonness.
Also, certain changes in the curriculum
of studies came about, for there were engaged new
teachers who held new views and opinions, and confused
their hearers with a multitude of new terms and phrases,
and displayed in their exposition of things both logical
sequence and a zest for modern discovery and much
warmth of individual bias. Yet their instruction,
alas! contained no life in the mouths
of those teachers a dead language savoured merely
of carrion. Thus everything connected with the
school underwent a radical alteration, and respect
for authority and the authorities waned, and tutors
and ushers came to be dubbed “Old Thedor,”
“Crusty,” and the like. And sundry
other things began to take place things
which necessitated many a penalty and expulsion; until,
within a couple of years, no one who had known the
school in former days would now have recognised it.
Nevertheless Tientietnikov, a youth
of retiring disposition, experienced no leanings towards
the nocturnal orgies of his companions, orgies during
which the latter used to flirt with damsels before
the very windows of the headmaster’s rooms,
nor yet towards their mockery of all that was sacred,
simply because fate had cast in their way an injudicious
priest. No, despite its dreaminess, his soul ever
remembered its celestial origin, and could not be
diverted from the path of virtue. Yet still he
hung his head, for, while his ambition had come to
life, it could find no sort of outlet. Truly
’twere well if it had not come to life,
for throughout the time that he was listening to professors
who gesticulated on their chairs he could not help
remembering the old preceptor who, invariably cool
and calm, had yet known how to make himself understood.
To what subjects, to what lectures, did the boy not
have to listen! to lectures on medicine,
and on philosophy, and on law, and on a version of
general history so enlarged that even three years
failed to enable the professor to do more than finish
the introduction thereto, and also the account of
the development of some self-governing towns in Germany.
None of the stuff remained fixed in Tientietnikov’s
brain save as shapeless clots; for though his native
intellect could not tell him how instruction ought
to be imparted, it at least told him that this
was not the way. And frequently, at such moments
he would recall Alexander Petrovitch, and give way
to such grief that scarcely did he know what he was
doing.
But youth is fortunate in the fact
that always before it there lies a future; and in
proportion as the time for his leaving school drew
nigh, Tientietnikov’s heart began to beat higher
and higher, and he said to himself: “This
is not life, but only a preparation for life.
True life is to be found in the Public Service.
There at least will there be scope for activity.”
So, bestowing not a glance upon that beautiful corner
of the world which never failed to strike the guest
or chance visitor with amazement, and reverencing
not a whit the dust of his ancestors, he followed
the example of most ambitious men of his class by repairing
to St. Petersburg (whither, as we know, the more spirited
youth of Russia from every quarter gravitates there
to enter the Public Service, to shine, to obtain promotion,
and, in a word, to scale the topmost peaks of that
pale, cold, deceptive elevation which is known as society).
But the real starting-point of Tientietnikov’s
ambition was the moment when his uncle (one State
Councillor Onifri Ivanovitch) instilled into him the
maxim that the only means to success in the Service
lay in good handwriting, and that, without that accomplishment,
no one could ever hope to become a Minister or Statesman.
Thus, with great difficulty, and also with the help
of his uncle’s influence, young Tientietnikov
at length succeeded in being posted to a Department.
On the day that he was conducted into a splendid,
shining hall a hall fitted with inlaid
floors and lacquered desks as fine as though this were
actually the place where the great ones of the Empire
met for discussion of the fortunes of the State; on
the day that he saw legions of handsome gentlemen
of the quill-driving profession making loud scratchings
with pens, and cocking their heads to one side; lastly
on the day that he saw himself also allotted a desk,
and requested to copy a document which appeared purposely
to be one of the pettiest possible order (as a matter
of fact it related to a sum of three roubles, and had
taken half a year to produce) well, at
that moment a curious, an unwonted sensation seized
upon the inexperienced youth, for the gentlemen around
him appeared so exactly like a lot of college students.
And, the further to complete the resemblance, some
of them were engaged in reading trashy translated
novels, which they kept hurriedly thrusting between
the sheets of their apportioned work whenever the
Director appeared, as though to convey the impression
that it was to that work alone that they were applying
themselves. In short, the scene seemed to Tientietnikov
strange, and his former pursuits more important than
his present, and his preparation for the Service preferable
to the Service itself. Yes, suddenly he felt
a longing for his old school; and as suddenly, and
with all the vividness of life, there appeared before
his vision the figure of Alexander Petrovitch.
He almost burst into tears as he beheld his old master,
and the room seemed to swim before his eyes, and the
tchinovniks and the desks to become a blur, and his
sight to grow dim. Then he thought to himself
with an effort: “No, no! I will
apply myself to my work, however petty it be at first.”
And hardening his heart and recovering his spirit,
he determined then and there to perform his duties
in such a manner as should be an example to the rest.
But where are compensations to be
found? Even in St. Petersburg, despite its grim
and murky exterior, they exist. Yes, even though
thirty degrees of keen, cracking frost may have bound
the streets, and the family of the North Wind be wailing
there, and the Snowstorm Witch have heaped high the
pavements, and be blinding the eyes, and powdering
beards and fur collars and the shaggy manes of horses even
then there will be shining hospitably through
the swirling snowflakes a fourth-floor window where,
in a cosy room, and by the light of modest candles,
and to the hiss of the samovar, there will be in progress
a discussion which warms the heart and soul, or else
a reading aloud of a brilliant page of one of those
inspired Russian poets with whom God has dowered us,
while the breast of each member of the company is
heaving with a rapture unknown under a noontide sky.
Gradually, therefore, Tientietnikov
grew more at home in the Service. Yet never did
it become, for him, the main pursuit, the main object
in life, which he had expected. No, it remained
but one of a secondary kind. That is to say,
it served merely to divide up his time, and enable
him the more to value his hours of leisure. Nevertheless,
just when his uncle was beginning to flatter himself
that his nephew was destined to succeed in the profession,
the said nephew elected to ruin his every hope.
Thus it befell. Tientietnikov’s friends
(he had many) included among their number a couple
of fellows of the species known as “embittered.”
That is to say, though good-natured souls of that
curiously restless type which cannot endure injustice,
nor anything which it conceives to be such, they were
thoroughly unbalanced of conduct themselves, and,
while demanding general agreement with their views,
treated those of others with the scantiest of ceremony.
Nevertheless these two associates exercised upon Tientietnikov both
by the fire of their eloquence and by the form of their
noble dissatisfaction with society a very
strong influence; with the result that, through arousing
in him an innate tendency to nervous resentment, they
led him also to notice trifles which before had escaped
his attention. An instance of this is seen in
the fact that he conceived against Thedor Thedorovitch
Lienitsin, Director of one of the Departments which
was quartered in the splendid range of offices before
mentioned, a dislike which proved the cause of his
discerning n the man a host of hitherto unmarked imperfections.
Above all things did Tientietnikov take it into his
head that, when conversing with his superiors, Lienitsin
became, of the moment, a stick of luscious sweetmeat,
but that, when conversing with his inferiors, he approximated
more to a vinegar cruet. Certain it is that, like
all petty-minded individuals, Lienitsin made a note
of any one who failed to offer him a greeting on festival
days, and that he revenged himself upon any one whose
visiting-card had not been handed to his butler.
Eventually the youth’s aversion almost attained
the point of hysteria; until he felt that, come what
might, he must insult the fellow in some fashion.
To that task he applied himself con amore;
and so thoroughly that he met with complete success.
That is to say, he seized on an occasion to address
Lienitsin in such fashion that the delinquent received
notice either to apologies or to leave the Service;
and when of these alternatives he chose the latter
his uncle came to him, and made a terrified appeal.
“For God’s sake remember what you are doing!”
he cried. “To think that, after beginning
your career so well, you should abandon it merely
for the reason that you have not fallen in with the
sort of Director whom you prefer! What do you
mean by it, what do you mean by it? Were others
to regard things in the same way, the Service would
find itself without a single individual. Reconsider
your conduct forego your pride and conceit,
and make Lienitsin amends.”
“But, dear Uncle,” the
nephew replied, “that is not the point.
The point is, not that I should find an apology difficult
to offer, seeing that, since Lienitsin is my superior,
and I ought not to have addressed him as I did, I
am clearly in the wrong. Rather, the point is
the following. To my charge there has been committed
the performance of another kind of service. That
is to say, I am the owner of three hundred peasant
souls, a badly administered estate, and a fool of
a bailiff. That being so, whereas the State will
lose little by having to fill my stool with another
copyist, it will lose very much by causing three hundred
peasant souls to fail in the payment of their taxes.
As I say (how am I to put it?), I am a landowner who
has preferred to enter the Public Service. Now,
should I employ myself henceforth in conserving, restoring,
and improving the fortunes of the souls whom God has
entrusted to my care, and thereby provide the State
with three hundred law-abiding, sober, hard-working
taxpayers, how will that service of mine rank as inferior
to the service of a department-directing fool like
Lienitsin?”
On hearing this speech, the State
Councillor could only gape, for he had not expected
Tientietnikov’s torrent of words. He reflected
a few moments, and then murmured:
“Yes, but, but but
how can a man like you retire to rustication in the
country? What society will you get there?
Here one meets at least a general or a prince sometimes;
indeed, no matter whom you pass in the street, that
person represents gas lamps and European civilisation;
but in the country, no matter what part of it you
are in, not a soul is to be encountered save muzhiks
and their women. Why should you go and condemn
yourself to a state of vegetation like that?”
Nevertheless the uncle’s expostulations
fell upon deaf ears, for already the nephew was beginning
to think of his estate as a retreat of a type more
likely to nourish the intellectual faculties and afford
the only profitable field of activity. After
unearthing one or two modern works on agriculture,
therefore, he, two weeks later, found himself in the
neighbourhood of the home where his boyhood had been
spent, and approaching the spot which never failed
to enthral the visitor or guest. And in the young
man’s breast there was beginning to palpitate
a new feeling in the young man’s
soul there were reawakening old, long-concealed impressions;
with the result that many a spot which had long been
faded from his memory now filled him with interest,
and the beautiful views on the estate found him gazing
at them like a newcomer, and with a beating heart.
Yes, as the road wound through a narrow ravine, and
became engulfed in a forest where, both above and below,
he saw three-centuries-old oaks which three men could
not have spanned, and where Siberian firs and elms
overtopped even the poplars, and as he asked the peasants
to tell him to whom the forest belonged, and they
replied, “To Tientietnikov,” and he issued
from the forest, and proceeded on his way through
meadows, and past spinneys of elder, and of old and
young willows, and arrived in sight of the distant
range of hills, and, crossing by two different bridges
the winding river (which he left successively to right
and to left of him as he did so), he again questioned
some peasants concerning the ownership of the meadows
and the flooded lands, and was again informed that
they all belonged to Tientietnikov, and then, ascending
a rise, reached a tableland where, on one side, lay
ungarnered fields of wheat and rye and barley, and,
on the other, the country already traversed (but which
now showed in shortened perspective), and then plunged
into the shade of some forked, umbrageous trees which
stood scattered over turf and extended to the manor-house
itself, and caught glimpses of the carved huts of the
peasants, and of the red roofs of the stone manorial
outbuildings, and of the glittering pinnacles of the
church, and felt his heart beating, and knew, without
being told by any one, whither he had at length arrived well,
then the feeling which had been growing within his
soul burst forth, and he cried in ecstasy:
“Why have I been a fool so long?
Why, seeing that fate has appointed me to be ruler
of an earthly paradise, did I prefer to bind myself
in servitude as a scribe of lifeless documents?
To think that, after I had been nurtured and schooled
and stored with all the knowledge necessary for the
diffusion of good among those under me, and for the
improvement of my domain, and for the fulfilment of
the manifold duties of a landowner who is at once
judge, administrator, and constable of his people,
I should have entrusted my estate to an ignorant bailiff,
and sought to maintain an absentee guardianship over
the affairs of serfs whom I have never met, and of
whose capabilities and characters I am yet ignorant!
To think that I should have deemed true estate-management
inferior to a documentary, fantastical management of
provinces which lie a thousand versts away, and which
my foot has never trod, and where I could never have
effected aught but blunders and irregularities!”
Meanwhile another spectacle was being
prepared for him. On learning that the barin
was approaching the mansion, the muzhiks collected
on the verandah in very variety of picturesque dress
and tonsure; and when these good folk surrounded him,
and there arose a resounding shout of “Here
is our Foster Father! He has remembered us!”
and, in spite of themselves, some of the older men
and women began weeping as they recalled his grandfather
and great-grandfather, he himself could not restrain
his tears, but reflected: “How much affection!
And in return for what? In return for my never
having come to see them in return for my
never having taken the least interest in their affairs!”
And then and there he registered a mental vow to share
their every task and occupation.
So he applied himself to supervising
and administering. He reduced the amount of the
barstchina , he decreased the number of working-days
for the owner, and he augmented the sum of the peasants’
leisure-time. He also dismissed the fool of a
bailiff, and took to bearing a personal hand in everything to
being present in the fields, at the threshing-floor,
at the kilns, at the wharf, at the freighting of barges
and rafts, and at their conveyance down the river:
wherefore even the lazy hands began to look to themselves.
But this did not last long. The peasant is an
observant individual, and Tientietnikov’s muzhiks
soon scented the fact that, though energetic and desirous
of doing much, the barin had no notion how to do it,
nor even how to set about it that, in short,
he spoke by the book rather than out of his personal
knowledge. Consequently things resulted, not
in master and men failing to understand one another,
but in their not singing together, in their not producing
the very same note.
That is to say, it was not long before
Tientietnikov noticed that on the manorial lands,
nothing prospered to the extent that it did on the
peasants’. The manorial crops were sown
in good time, and came up well, and every one appeared
to work his best, so much so that Tientietnikov, who
supervised the whole, frequently ordered mugs of vodka
to be served out as a reward for the excellence of
the labour performed. Yet the rye on the peasants’
land had formed into ear, and the oats had begun to
shoot their grain, and the millet had filled before,
on the manorial lands, the corn had so much as grown
to stalk, or the ears had sprouted in embryo.
In short, gradually the barin realised that, in spite
of favours conferred, the peasants were playing the
rogue with him. Next he resorted to remonstrance,
but was met with the reply, “How could we not
do our best for our barin? You yourself saw how
well we laboured at the ploughing and the sowing,
for you gave us mugs of vodka for our pains.”
“Then why have things turned
out so badly?” the barin persisted.
“Who can say? It must be
that a grub has eaten the crop from below. Besides,
what a summer has it been never a drop of
rain!”
Nevertheless, the barin noted that
no grub had eaten the peasants’ crops,
as well as that the rain had fallen in the most curious
fashion namely, in patches. It had
obliged the muzhiks, but had shed a mere sprinkling
for the barin.
Still more difficult did he find it
to deal with the peasant women. Ever and anon
they would beg to be excused from work, or start making
complaints of the severity of the barstchina.
Indeed, they were terrible folk! However, Tientietnikov
abolished the majority of the tithes of linen, hedge
fruit, mushrooms, and nuts, and also reduced by one-half
other tasks proper to the women, in the hope that they
would devote their spare time to their own domestic
concerns namely, to sewing and mending,
and to making clothes for their husbands, and to increasing
the area of their kitchen gardens. Yet no such
result came about. On the contrary, such a pitch
did the idleness, the quarrelsomeness, and the intriguing
and caballing of the fair sex attain that their helpmeets
were for ever coming to the barin with a request that
he would rid one or another of his wife, since she
had become a nuisance, and to live with her was impossible.
Next, hardening his heart, the barin
attempted severity. But of what avail was severity?
The peasant woman remained always the peasant woman,
and would come and whine that she was sick and ailing,
and keep pitifully hugging to herself the mean and
filthy rags which she had donned for the occasion.
And when poor Tientietnikov found himself unable to
say more to her than just, “Get out of my sight,
and may the Lord go with you!” the next item
in the comedy would be that he would see her, even
as she was leaving his gates, fall to contending with
a neighbour for, say, the possession of a turnip,
and dealing out slaps in the face such as even a strong,
healthy man could scarcely have compassed!
Again, amongst other things, Tientietnikov
conceived the idea of establishing a school for his
people; but the scheme resulted in a farce which left
him in sackcloth and ashes. In the same way he
found that, when it came to a question of dispensing
justice and of adjusting disputes, the host of juridical
subtleties with which the professors had provided
him proved absolutely useless. That is to say,
the one party lied, and the other party lied, and
only the devil could have decided between them.
Consequently he himself perceived that a knowledge
of mankind would have availed him more than all the
legal refinements and philosophical maxims in the
world could do. He lacked something; and though
he could not divine what it was, the situation brought
about was the common one of the barin failing to understand
the peasant, and the peasant failing to understand
the barin, and both becoming disaffected. In
the end, these difficulties so chilled Tientietnikov’s
enthusiasm that he took to supervising the labours
of the field with greatly diminished attention.
That is to say, no matter whether the scythes were
softly swishing through the grass, or ricks were being
built, or rafts were being loaded, he would allow
his eyes to wander from his men, and to fall to gazing
at, say, a red-billed, red-legged heron which, after
strutting along the bank of a stream, would have caught
a fish in its beak, and be holding it awhile, as though
in doubt whether to swallow it. Next he would
glance towards the spot where a similar bird, but one
not yet in possession of a fish, was engaged in watching
the doings of its mate. Lastly, with eyebrows
knitted, and face turned to scan the zenith, he would
drink in the smell of the fields, and fall to listening
to the winged population of the air as from earth and
sky alike the manifold music of winged creatures combined
in a single harmonious chorus. In the rye the
quail would be calling, and, in the grass, the corncrake,
and over them would be wheeling flocks of twittering
linnets. Also, the jacksnipe would be uttering
its croak, and the lark executing its roulades
where it had become lost in the sunshine, and cranes
sending forth their trumpet-like challenge as they
deployed towards the zenith in triangle-shaped flocks.
In fact, the neighbourhood would seem to have become
converted into one great concert of melody. O
Creator, how fair is Thy world where, in remote, rural
seclusion, it lies apart from cities and from highways!
But soon even this began to pall upon
Tientietnikov, and he ceased altogether to visit his
fields, or to do aught but shut himself up in his
rooms, where he refused to receive even the bailiff
when that functionary called with his reports.
Again, although, until now, he had to a certain extent
associated with a retired colonel of hussars a
man saturated with tobacco smoke and also
with a student of pronounced, but immature, opinions
who culled the bulk of his wisdom from contemporary
newspapers and pamphlets, he found, as time went on,
that these companions proved as tedious as the rest,
and came to think their conversation superficial,
and their European method of comporting themselves that
is to say, the method of conversing with much slapping
of knees and a great deal of bowing and gesticulation too
direct and unadorned. So these and every one
else he decided to “drop,” and carried
this resolution into effect with a certain amount of
rudeness. On the next occasion that Varvar Nikolaievitch
Vishnepokromov called to indulge in a free-and-easy
symposium on politics, philosophy, literature, morals,
and the state of financial affairs in England (he was,
in all matters which admit of superficial discussion,
the pleasantest fellow alive, seeing that he was a
typical representative both of the retired fire-eater
and of the school of thought which is now becoming
the rage) when, I say, this next happened,
Tientietnikov merely sent out to say that he was not
at home, and then carefully showed himself at the
window. Host and guest exchanged glances, and,
while the one muttered through his teeth “The
cur!” the other relieved his feelings with a
remark or two on swine. Thus the acquaintance
came to an abrupt end, and from that time forth no
visitor called at the mansion.
Tientietnikov in no way regretted
this, for he could now devote himself wholly to the
projection of a great work on Russia. Of the scale
on which this composition was conceived the reader
is already aware. The reader also knows how strange,
how unsystematic, was the system employed in it.
Yet to say that Tientietnikov never awoke from his
lethargy would not be altogether true. On the
contrary, when the post brought him newspapers and
reviews, and he saw in their printed pages, perhaps,
the well-known name of some former comrade who had
succeeded in the great field of Public Service, or
had conferred upon science and the world’s work
some notable contribution, he would succumb to secret
and suppressed grief, and involuntarily there would
burst from his soul an expression of aching, voiceless
regret that he himself had done so little. And
at these times his existence would seem to him odious
and repellent; at these times there would uprise before
him the memory of his school days, and the figure
of Alexander Petrovitch, as vivid as in life.
And, slowly welling, the tears would course over Tientietnikov’s
cheeks.
What meant these repinings? Was
there not disclosed in them the secret of his galling
spiritual pain the fact that he had failed
to order his life aright, to confirm the lofty aims
with which he had started his course; the fact that,
always poorly equipped with experience, he had failed
to attain the better and the higher state, and there
to strengthen himself for the overcoming of hindrances
and obstacles; the fact that, dissolving like overheated
metal, his bounteous store of superior instincts had
failed to take the final tempering; the fact that
the tutor of his boyhood, a man in a thousand, had
prematurely died, and left to Tientietnikov no one
who could restore to him the moral strength shattered
by vacillation and the will power weakened by want
of virility no one, in short, who could
cry hearteningly to his soul “Forward!” the
word for which the Russian of every degree, of every
class, of every occupation, of every school of thought,
is for ever hungering.
Indeed, where is the man who
can cry aloud for any of us, in the Russian tongue
dear to our soul, the all-compelling command “Forward!”?
Who is there who, knowing the strength and the nature
and the inmost depths of the Russian genius, can by
a single magic incantation divert our ideals to the
higher life? Were there such a man, with what
tears, with what affection, would not the grateful
sons of Russia repay him! Yet age succeeds to
age, and our callow youth still lies wrapped in shameful
sloth, or strives and struggles to no purpose.
God has not yet given us the man able to sound the
call.
One circumstance which almost aroused
Tientietnikov, which almost brought about a revolution
in his character, was the fact that he came very near
to falling in love. Yet even this resulted in
nothing. Ten versts away there lived the general
whom we have heard expressing himself in highly uncomplimentary
terms concerning Tientietnikov. He maintained
a General-like establishment, dispensed hospitality
(that is to say, was glad when his neighbours came
to pay him their respects, though he himself never
went out), spoke always in a hoarse voice, read a
certain number of books, and had a daughter a
curious, unfamiliar type, but full of life as life
itself. This maiden’s name was Ulinka,
and she had been strangely brought up, for, losing
her mother in early childhood, she had subsequently
received instruction at the hands of an English governess
who knew not a single word of Russian. Moreover
her father, though excessively fond of her, treated
her always as a toy; with the result that, as she
grew to years of discretion, she became wholly wayward
and spoilt. Indeed, had any one seen the sudden
rage which would gather on her beautiful young forehead
when she was engaged in a heated dispute with her
father, he would have thought her one of the most
capricious beings in the world. Yet that rage
gathered only when she had heard of injustice or harsh
treatment, and never because she desired to argue
on her own behalf, or to attempt to justify her own
conduct. Also, that anger would disappear as soon
as ever she saw any one whom she had formerly disliked
fall upon evil times, and, at his first request for
alms would, without consideration or subsequent regret,
hand him her purse and its whole contents. Yes,
her every act was strenuous, and when she spoke her
whole personality seemed to be following hot-foot
upon her thought both her expression of
face and her diction and the movements of her hands.
Nay, the very folds of her frock had a similar appearance
of striving; until one would have thought that all
her self were flying in pursuit of her words.
Nor did she know reticence: before any one she
would disclose her mind, and no force could compel
her to maintain silence when she desired to speak.
Also, her enchanting, peculiar gait a gait
which belonged to her alone was so absolutely
free and unfettered that every one involuntarily gave
her way. Lastly, in her presence churls seemed
to become confused and fall to silence, and even the
roughest and most outspoken would lose their heads,
and have not a word to say; whereas the shy man would
find himself able to converse as never in his life
before, and would feel, from the first, as though
he had seen her and known her at some previous period during
the days of some unremembered childhood, when he was
at home, and spending a merry evening among a crowd
of romping children. And for long afterwards
he would feel as though his man’s intellect and
estate were a burden.
This was what now befell Tientietnikov;
and as it did so a new feeling entered into his soul,
and his dreamy life lightened for a moment.
At first the General used to receive
him with hospitable civility, but permanent concord
between them proved impossible; their conversation
always merged into dissension and soreness, seeing
that, while the General could not bear to be contradicted
or worsted in an argument, Tientietnikov was a man
of extreme sensitiveness. True, for the daughter’s
sake, the father was for a while deferred to, and thus
peace was maintained; but this lasted only until the
time when there arrived, on a visit to the General,
two kinswomen of his the Countess Bordirev
and the Princess Uziakin, retired Court dames,
but ladies who still kept up a certain connection
with Court circles, and therefore were much fawned
upon by their host. No sooner had they appeared
on the scene than (so it seemed to Tientietnikov)
the General’s attitude towards the young man
became colder either he ceased to notice
him at all or he spoke to him familiarly, and as to
a person having no standing in society. This
offended Tientietnikov deeply, and though, when at
length he spoke out on the subject, he retained sufficient
presence of mind to compress his lips, and to preserve
a gentle and courteous tone, his face flushed and
his inner man was boiling.
“General,” he said, “I
thank you for your condescension. By addressing
me in the second person singular, you have admitted
me to the circle of your most intimate friends.
Indeed, were it not that a difference of years forbids
any familiarity on my part, I should answer you in
similar fashion.”
The General sat aghast. At length,
rallying his tongue and his faculties, he replied
that, though he had spoken with a lack of ceremony,
he had used the term “thou” merely as an
elderly man naturally employs it towards a junior
(he made no reference to difference of rank).
Nevertheless, the acquaintance broke
off here, and with it any possibility of love-making.
The light which had shed a momentary gleam before
Tientietnikov’s eyes had become extinguished
for ever, and upon it there followed a darkness denser
than before. Henceforth everything conduced to
evolve the regime which the reader has noted that
regime of sloth and inaction which converted Tientietnikov’s
residence into a place of dirt and neglect. For
days at a time would a broom and a heap of dust be
left lying in the middle of a room, and trousers tossing
about the salon, and pairs of worn-out braces adorning
the what-not near the sofa. In short, so mean
and untidy did Tientietnikov’s mode of life
become, that not only his servants, but even his very
poultry ceased to treat him with respect. Taking
up a pen, he would spend hours in idly sketching houses,
huts, waggons, troïkas, and flourishes on a piece
of paper; while at other times, when he had sunk into
a reverie, the pen would, all unknowingly, sketch
a small head which had delicate features, a pair of
quick, penetrating eyes, and a raised coiffure.
Then suddenly the dreamer would perceive, to his surprise,
that the pen had executed the portrait of a maiden
whose picture no artist could adequately have painted;
and therewith his despondency would become greater
than ever, and, believing that happiness did not exist
on earth, he would relapse into increased ennui, increased
neglect of his responsibilities.
But one morning he noticed, on moving
to the window after breakfast, that not a word was
proceeding either from the butler or the housekeeper,
but that, on the contrary, the courtyard seemed to
smack of a certain bustle and excitement. This
was because through the entrance gates (which the
kitchen maid and the scullion had run to open) there
were appearing the noses of three horses one
to the right, one in the middle, and one to the left,
after the fashion of triumphal groups of statuary.
Above them, on the box seat, were seated a coachman
and a valet, while behind, again, there could be discerned
a gentleman in a scarf and a fur cap. Only when
the equipage had entered the courtyard did it stand
revealed as a light spring britchka. And as it
came to a halt, there leapt on to the verandah of
the mansion an individual of respectable exterior,
and possessed of the art of moving with the neatness
and alertness of a military man.
Upon this Tientietnikov’s heart
stood still. He was unused to receiving visitors,
and for the moment conceived the new arrival to be
a Government official, sent to question him concerning
an abortive society to which he had formerly belonged.
(Here the author may interpolate the fact that, in
Tientietnikov’s early days, the young man had
become mixed up in a very absurd affair. That
is to say, a couple of philosophers belonging to a
regiment of hussars had, together with an aesthete
who had not yet completed his student’s course
and a gambler who had squandered his all, formed a
secret society of philanthropic aims under the presidency
of a certain old rascal of a freemason and the ruined
gambler aforesaid. The scope of the society’s
work was to be extensive: it was to bring lasting
happiness to humanity at large, from the banks of
the Thames to the shores of Kamtchatka. But for
this much money was needed: wherefore from the
noble-minded members of the society generous contributions
were demanded, and then forwarded to a destination
known only to the supreme authorities of the concern.
As for Tientietnikov’s adhesion, it was brought
about by the two friends already alluded to as “embittered” good-hearted
souls whom the wear and tear of their efforts on behalf
of science, civilisation, and the future emancipation
of mankind had ended by converting into confirmed
drunkards. Perhaps it need hardly be said that
Tientietnikov soon discovered how things stood, and
withdrew from the association; but, meanwhile, the
latter had had the misfortune so to have engaged in
dealings not wholly creditable to gentlemen of noble
origin as likewise to have become entangled in dealings
with the police. Consequently, it is not to be
wondered at that, though Tientietnikov had long severed
his connection with the society and its policy, he
still remained uneasy in his mind as to what might
even yet be the result.)
However, his fears vanished the instant
that the guest saluted him with marked politeness
and explained, with many deferential poises of the
head, and in terms at once civil and concise, that
for some time past he (the newcomer) had been touring
the Russian Empire on business and in the pursuit
of knowledge, that the Empire abounded in objects
of interest not to mention a plenitude of
manufactures and a great diversity of soil, and that,
in spite of the fact that he was greatly struck with
the amenities of his host’s domain, he would
certainly not have presumed to intrude at such an
inconvenient hour but for the circumstance that the
inclement spring weather, added to the state of the
roads, had necessitated sundry repairs to his carriage
at the hands of wheelwrights and blacksmiths.
Finally he declared that, even if this last had not
happened, he would still have felt unable to deny himself
the pleasure of offering to his host that meed of homage
which was the latter’s due.
This speech a speech of
fascinating bonhomie delivered, the guest
executed a sort of shuffle with a half-boot of patent
leather studded with buttons of mother-of-pearl, and
followed that up by (in spite of his pronounced rotundity
of figure) stepping backwards with all the elan of
an india-rubber ball.
From this the somewhat reassured Tientietnikov
concluded that his visitor must be a literary, knowledge-seeking
professor who was engaged in roaming the country in
search of botanical specimens and fossils; wherefore
he hastened to express both his readiness to further
the visitor’s objects (whatever they might be)
and his personal willingness to provide him with the
requisite wheelwrights and blacksmiths. Meanwhile
he begged his guest to consider himself at home, and,
after seating him in an armchair, made preparations
to listen to the newcomer’s discourse on natural
history.
But the newcomer applied himself,
rather, to phenomena of the internal world, saying
that his life might be likened to a barque tossed on
the crests of perfidious billows, that in his time
he had been fated to play many parts, and that on
more than one occasion his life had stood in danger
at the hands of foes. At the same time, these
tidings were communicated in a manner calculated to
show that the speaker was also a man of practical
capabilities. In conclusion, the visitor took
out a cambric pocket-handkerchief, and sneezed into
it with a vehemence wholly new to Tientietnikov’s
experience. In fact, the sneeze rather resembled
the note which, at times, the trombone of an orchestra
appears to utter not so much from its proper place
on the platform as from the immediate neighbourhood
of the listener’s ear. And as the echoes
of the drowsy mansion resounded to the report of the
explosion there followed upon the same a wave of perfume,
skilfully wafted abroad with a flourish of the eau-de-Cologne-scented
handkerchief.
By this time the reader will have
guessed that the visitor was none other than our old
and respected friend Paul Ivanovitch Chichikov.
Naturally, time had not spared him his share of anxieties
and alarms; wherefore his exterior had come to look
a trifle more elderly, his frockcoat had taken on
a suggestion of shabbiness, and britchka, coachman,
valet, horses, and harness alike had about them a sort
of second-hand, worse-for-wear effect. Evidently
the Chichikovian finances were not in the most flourishing
of conditions. Nevertheless, the old expression
of face, the old air of breeding and refinement, remained
unimpaired, and our hero had even improved in the art
of walking and turning with grace, and of dexterously
crossing one leg over the other when taking a seat.
Also, his mildness of diction, his discreet moderation
of word and phrase, survived in, if anything, increased
measure, and he bore himself with a skill which caused
his tactfulness to surpass itself in sureness of aplomb.
And all these accomplishments had their effect further
heightened by a snowy immaculateness of collar and
dickey, and an absence of dust from his frockcoat,
as complete as though he had just arrived to attend
a nameday festival. Lastly, his cheeks and chin
were of such neat clean-shavenness that no one but
a blind man could have failed to admire their rounded
contours.
From that moment onwards great changes
took place in Tientietnikov’s establishment,
and certain of its rooms assumed an unwonted air of
cleanliness and order. The rooms in question were
those assigned to Chichikov, while one other apartment a
little front chamber opening into the hall became
permeated with Petrushka’s own peculiar smell.
But this lasted only for a little while, for presently
Petrushka was transferred to the servants’ quarters,
a course which ought to have been adopted in the first
instance.
During the initial days of Chichikov’s
sojourn, Tientietnikov feared rather to lose his independence,
inasmuch as he thought that his guest might hamper
his movements, and bring about alterations in the
established routine of the place. But these fears
proved groundless, for Paul Ivanovitch displayed an
extraordinary aptitude for accommodating himself to
his new position. To begin with, he encouraged
his host in his philosophical inertia by saying that
the latter would help Tientietnikov to become a centenarian.
Next, in the matter of a life of isolation, he hit
things off exactly by remarking that such a life bred
in a man a capacity for high thinking. Lastly,
as he inspected the library and dilated on books in
general, he contrived an opportunity to observe that
literature safeguarded a man from a tendency to waste
his time. In short, the few words of which he
delivered himself were brief, but invariably to the
point. And this discretion of speech was outdone
by his discretion of conduct. That is to say,
whether entering or leaving the room, he never wearied
his host with a question if Tientietnikov had the
air of being disinclined to talk; and with equal satisfaction
the guest could either play chess or hold his tongue.
Consequently Tientietnikov said to himself:
“For the first time in my life
I have met with a man with whom it is possible to
live. In general, not many of the type exist in
Russia, and, though clever, good-humoured, well-educated
men abound, one would be hard put to it to find an
individual of equable temperament with whom one could
share a roof for centuries without a quarrel arising.
Anyway, Chichikov is the first of his sort that I
have met.”
For his part, Chichikov was only too
delighted to reside with a person so quiet and agreeable
as his host. Of a wandering life he was temporarily
weary, and to rest, even for a month, in such a beautiful
spot, and in sight of green fields and the slow flowering
of spring, was likely to benefit him also from the
hygienic point of view. And, indeed, a more delightful
retreat in which to recuperate could not possibly have
been found. The spring, long retarded by previous
cold, had now begun in all its comeliness, and life
was rampant. Already, over the first emerald
of the grass, the dandelion was showing yellow, and
the red-pink anemone was hanging its tender head;
while the surface of every pond was a swarm of dancing
gnats and midges, and the water-spider was being joined
in their pursuit by birds which gathered from every
quarter to the vantage-ground of the dry reeds.
Every species of creature also seemed to be assembling
in concourse, and taking stock of one another.
Suddenly the earth became populous, the forest had
opened its eyes, and the meadows were lifting up their
voice in song. In the same way had choral dances
begun to be weaved in the village, and everywhere that
the eye turned there was merriment. What brightness
in the green of nature, what freshness in the air,
what singing of birds in the gardens of the mansion,
what general joy and rapture and exaltation! Particularly
in the village might the shouting and singing have
been in honour of a wedding!
Chichikov walked hither, thither,
and everywhere a pursuit for which there
was ample choice and facility. At one time he
would direct his steps along the edge of the flat
tableland, and contemplate the depths below, where
still there lay sheets of water left by the floods
of winter, and where the island-like patches of forest
showed leafless boughs; while at another time he would
plunge into the thicket and ravine country, where
nests of birds weighted branches almost to the ground,
and the sky was darkened with the criss-cross flight
of cawing rooks. Again, the drier portions of
the meadows could be crossed to the river wharves,
whence the first barges were just beginning to set
forth with pea-meal and barley and wheat, while at
the same time one’s ear would be caught with
the sound of some mill resuming its functions as once
more the water turned the wheel. Chichikov would
also walk afield to watch the early tillage operations
of the season, and observe how the blackness of a
new furrow would make its way across the expanse of
green, and how the sower, rhythmically striking his
hand against the pannier slung across his breast,
would scatter his fistfuls of seed with equal distribution,
apportioning not a grain too much to one side or to
the other.
In fact, Chichikov went everywhere.
He chatted and talked, now with the bailiff, now with
a peasant, now with a miller, and inquired into the
manner and nature of everything, and sought information
as to how an estate was managed, and at what price
corn was selling, and what species of grain was best
for spring and autumn grinding, and what was the name
of each peasant, and who were his kinsfolk, and where
he had bought his cow, and what he fed his pigs on.
Chichikov also made inquiry concerning the number
of peasants who had lately died: but of these
there appeared to be few. And suddenly his quick
eye discerned that Tientietnikov’s estate was
not being worked as it might have been that
much neglect and listlessness and pilfering and drunkenness
was abroad; and on perceiving this, he thought to
himself: “What a fool is that Tientietnikov!
To think of letting a property like this decay when
he might be drawing from it an income of fifty thousand
roubles a year!”
Also, more than once, while taking
these walks, our hero pondered the idea of himself
becoming a landowner not now, of course,
but later, when his chief aim should have been achieved,
and he had got into his hands the necessary means
for living the quiet life of the proprietor of an
estate. Yes, and at these times there would include
itself in his castle-building the figure of a young,
fresh, fair-faced maiden of the mercantile or other
rich grade of society, a woman who could both play
and sing. He also dreamed of little descendants
who should perpetuate the name of Chichikov; perhaps
a frolicsome little boy and a fair young daughter,
or possibly, two boys and quite two or three daughters;
so that all should know that he had really lived and
had his being, that he had not merely roamed the world
like a spectre or a shadow; so that for him and his
the country should never be put to shame. And
from that he would go on to fancy that a title appended
to his rank would not be a bad thing the
title of State Councillor, for instance, which was
deserving of all honour and respect. Ah, it is
a common thing for a man who is taking a solitary
walk so to detach himself from the irksome realities
of the present that he is able to stir and to excite
and to provoke his imagination to the conception of
things he knows can never really come to pass!
Chichikov’s servants also found
the mansion to their taste, and, like their master,
speedily made themselves at home in it. In particular
did Petrushka make friends with Grigory the butler,
although at first the pair showed a tendency to outbrag
one another Petrushka beginning by throwing
dust in Grigory’s eyes on the score of his (Petrushka’s)
travels, and Grigory taking him down a peg or two by
referring to St. Petersburg (a city which Petrushka
had never visited), and Petrushka seeking to recover
lost ground by dilating on towns which he had
visited, and Grigory capping this by naming some town
which is not to be found on any map in existence,
and then estimating the journey thither as at least
thirty thousand versts a statement which
would so completely flabbergast the henchman of Chichikov’s
suite that he would be left staring open-mouthed,
amid the general laughter of the domestic staff.
However, as I say, the pair ended by swearing eternal
friendship with one another, and making a practice
of resorting to the village tavern in company.
For Selifan, however, the place had
a charm of a different kind. That is to say,
each evening there would take place in the village
a singing of songs and a weaving of country dances;
and so shapely and buxom were the maidens maidens
of a type hard to find in our present-day villages
on large estates that he would stand for
hours wondering which of them was the best. White-necked
and white-bosomed, all had great roving eyes, the
gait of peacocks, and hair reaching to the waist.
And as, with his hands clasping theirs, he glided
hither and thither in the dance, or retired backwards
towards a wall with a row of other young fellows, and
then, with them, returned to meet the damsels all
singing in chorus (and laughing as they sang it),
“Boyars, show me my bridegroom!” and dusk
was falling gently, and from the other side of the
river there kept coming far, faint, plaintive echoes
of the melody well, then our Selifan hardly
knew whether he were standing upon his head or his
heels. Later, when sleeping and when waking,
both at noon and at twilight, he would seem still
to be holding a pair of white hands, and moving in
the dance.
Chichikov’s horses also found
nothing of which to disapprove. Yes, both the
bay, the Assessor, and the skewbald accounted residence
at Tientietnikov’s a most comfortable affair,
and voted the oats excellent, and the arrangement
of the stables beyond all cavil. True, on this
occasion each horse had a stall to himself; yet, by
looking over the intervening partition, it was possible
always to see one’s fellows, and, should a neighbour
take it into his head to utter a neigh, to answer it
at once.
As for the errand which had hitherto
led Chichikov to travel about Russia, he had now decided
to move very cautiously and secretly in the matter.
In fact, on noticing that Tientietnikov went in absorbedly
for reading and for talking philosophy, the visitor
said to himself, “No I had better
begin at the other end,” and proceeded first
to feel his way among the servants of the establishment.
From them he learnt several things, and, in particular,
that the barin had been wont to go and call upon a
certain General in the neighbourhood, and that the
General possessed a daughter, and that she and Tientietnikov
had had an affair of some sort, but that the pair
had subsequently parted, and gone their several ways.
For that matter, Chichikov himself had noticed that
Tientietnikov was in the habit of drawing heads of
which each representation exactly resembled the rest.
Once, as he sat tapping his silver
snuff-box after luncheon, Chichikov remarked:
“One thing you lack, and only one, Andrei Ivanovitch.”
“What is that?” asked his host.
“A female friend or two,” replied Chichikov.
Tientietnikov made no rejoinder, and
the conversation came temporarily to an end.
But Chichikov was not to be discouraged;
wherefore, while waiting for supper and talking on
different subjects, he seized an opportunity to interject:
“Do you know, it would do you no harm to marry.”
As before, Tientietnikov did not reply,
and the renewed mention of the subject seemed to have
annoyed him.
For the third time it was
after supper Chichikov returned to the
charge by remarking:
“To-day, as I was walking round
your property, I could not help thinking that marriage
would do you a great deal of good. Otherwise you
will develop into a hypochondriac.”
Whether Chichikov’s words now
voiced sufficiently the note of persuasion, or whether
Tientietnikov happened, at the moment, to be unusually
disposed to frankness, at all events the young landowner
sighed, and then responded as he expelled a puff of
tobacco smoke:
“To attain anything, Paul Ivanovitch,
one needs to have been born under a lucky star.”
And he related to his guest the whole
history of his acquaintanceship and subsequent rupture
with the General.
As Chichikov listened to the recital,
and gradually realised that the affair had arisen
merely out of a chance word on the General’s
part, he was astounded beyond measure, and gazed at
Tientietnikov without knowing what to make of him.
“Andrei Ivanovitch,” he
said at length, “what was there to take offence
at?”
“Nothing, as regards the actual
words spoken,” replied the other. “The
offence lay, rather, in the insult conveyed in the
General’s tone.” Tientietnikov was
a kindly and peaceable man, yet his eyes flashed as
he said this, and his voice vibrated with wounded
feeling.
“Yet, even then, need you have taken it so much
amiss?”
“What? Could I have gone on visiting him
as before?”
“Certainly. No great harm had been done?”
“I disagree with you. Had
he been an old man in a humble station of life, instead
of a proud and swaggering officer, I should not have
minded so much. But, as it was, I could not, and
would not, brook his words.”
“A curious fellow, this Tientietnikov!”
thought Chichikov to himself.
“A curious fellow, this Chichikov!”
was Tientietnikov’s inward reflection.
“I tell you what,” resumed
Chichikov. “To-morrow I myself will go and
see the General.”
“To what purpose?” asked
Tientietnikov, with astonishment and distrust in his
eyes.
“To offer him an assurance of my personal respect.”
“A strange fellow, this Chichikov!” reflected
Tientietnikov.
“A strange fellow, this Tientietnikov!”
thought Chichikov, and then added aloud: “Yes,
I will go and see him at ten o’clock to-morrow;
but since my britchka is not yet altogether in travelling
order, would you be so good as to lend me your koliaska
for the purpose?”