Torrents of Spring
by Ivan Turgenev
Translated by Constance Garnett
"Years of gladness,
Days of joy,
Like the torrents of spring
They hurried away."
. . .
--From an Old Ballad.
. . . AT two o'clock in the night he had gone back to his study. He had dismissed
the servant after the candles were lighted, and throwing himself into a low
chair by the hearth, he hid his face in both hands.
Never had he felt such weariness of body and of spirit. He had passed the
whole evening in the company of charming ladies and cultivated men; some of
the ladies were beautiful, almost all the men were distinguished by intellect
or talent; he himself had talked with great success, even with brilliance
. . . and, for all that, never yet had the taedium vitae of which the Romans
talked of old, the "disgust for life," taken hold of him with such
irresistible, such suffocating force. Had he been a little younger, he would
have cried with misery, weariness, and exasperation: a biting, burning bitterness,
like the bitter of wormwood, filled his whole soul. A sort of clinging repugnance,
a weight of loathing closed in upon him on all sides like a dark night of
autumn; and he did not know how to get free from this darkness, this bitterness.
Sleep it was useless to reckon upon; he knew he should not sleep.
He fell to thinking . . . slowly, listlessly, wrathfully. He thought of the
vanity, the uselessness, the vulgar falsity of all things human. All the stages
of man's life passed in order before his mental gaze (he had himself lately
reached his fifty-second year), and not one found grace in his eyes. Everywhere
the same everlasting pouring of water into a sieve, the everlasting beating
of the air, everywhere the same self-deception---half in good faith, half
conscious--any toy to amuse the child, so long as it keeps him from crying.
And then, all of a sudden, old age drops down like snow on the head, and with
it the ever-growing, ever-gnawing, and devouring dread of death . . . and
the plunge into the abyss! Lucky indeed if life works out so to the end! May
be, before the end, like rust on iron, sufferings, infirmities come. . . He
did not picture life's sea, as the poets depict it, covered with tempestuous
waves; no, he thought of that sea as a smooth, untroubled surface, stagnant
and transparent to its darkest depths. He himself sits in a little tottering
boat, and down below in those dark oozy depths, like prodigious fishes, he
can just make out the shapes of hideous monsters: all the ills of life, diseases,
sorrows, madness, poverty, blindness. . . . He gazes, and behold, one of these
monsters separates itself off from the darkness, rises higher and higher,
stands out more and more distinct, more and more loathsomely distinct. . .
. An instant yet, and the boat that bears him will be overturned! But behold,
it grows dim again, it withdraws, sinks down to the bottom, and there it lies,
faintly stirring in the slime. . . . But the fated day will come, and it will
overturn the boat.
He shook his head, jumped up from his low chair, took two turns up and down
the room, sat down to the writing-table, and opening one drawer after another,
began to rummage among his papers, among old letters, mostly from women. He
could not have said why he was doing it; he was not looking for anything--he
simply wanted by some kind of external occupation to get away from the thoughts
oppressing him. Opening several letters at random (in one of them there was
a withered flower tied with a bit of faded ribbon), he merely shrugged his
shoulders, and glancing at the hearth, he tossed them on one side, probably
with the idea of burning all this useless rubbish. Hurriedly, thrusting his
hands first into one, and then into another drawer, he suddenly opened his
eyes wide, and slowly bringing out a little octagonal box of old-fashioned
make, he slowly raised its lid. In the box, under two layers of cotton wool,
yellow with age, was a little garnet cross.
For a few instants he looked in perplexity at this cross--suddenly he gave
a faint cry. . . . Something between regret and delight was expressed in his
features. Such an expression a man's face wears when he suddenly meets some
one whom he has long lost sight of, whom he has at one time tenderly loved,
and who suddenly springs up before his eyes, still the same, and utterly transformed
by the years.
He got up, and going back to the hearth, he sat down again in the arm-chair,
and again hid his face in his hands. . . . "Why to-day? just to-day?" was his thought, and he remembered many things, long since past.
This is what he remembered. . . .
But first I must mention his name, his father's name and his surname. He was
called Dimitri Pavlovitch Sanin.
Here follows what he remembered.
Chapter I
IT was the summer of 1840. Sanin was in his twenty-second year, and he was
in Frankfort on his way home from Italy to Russia. He was a man of small property,
but independent, almost without family ties. By the death of a distant relative,
he had come into a few thousand roubles, and he had decided to spend this
sum abroad before entering the service, before finally putting on the government
yoke, without which he could not obtain a secure livelihood. Sanin had carried
out this intention, and had fitted things in to such a nicety that on the
day of his arrival in Frankfort he had only just enough money left to take
him back to Petersburg. In the year 1840 there were few railroads in existence;
tourists travelled by diligence. Sanin had taken a place in the "bei-wagon";
but the diligence did not start till eleven o'clock in the evening. There
was a great deal of time to be got through before then. Fortunately it was
lovely weather, and Sanin after dining at a hotel, famous in those days, the
White Swan, set off to stroll about the town. He went in to look at Danneker's
Ariadne, which he did not much care for, visited the house of Goethe, of whose
works he had, however, only read Werter, and that in the French translation.
He walked along the bank of the Maine, and was bored as a well-conducted tourist
should be; at last at six o'clock in the evening, tired, and with dusty boots,
he found himself in one of the least remarkable streets in Frankfort. That
street he was fated not to forget long, long after. On one of its few houses
he saw a signboard: "Giovanni Roselli, Italian confectionery," was
announced upon it. Sanin went into it to get a glass of lemonade; but in the
shop, where, behind the modest counter, on the shelves of a stained cupboard,
recalling a chemist's shop, stood a few bottles with gold labels, and as many
glass jars of biscuits, chocolate cakes, and sweetmeats--in this room, there
was not a soul; only a grey cat blinked and purred, sharpening its claws on
a tall wicker chair near the window and a bright patch of colour was made
in the evening sunlight, by a big ball of red wool lying on the floor beside
a carved wooden basket turned upside down. A confused noise was audible in
the next room. Sanin stood a moment, and making the bell on the door ring
its loudest, he called, raising his voice, "Is there no one here?" At that instant the door from an inner room was thrown open, and Sanin was
struck dumb with amazement.
Chapter II
A YOUNG girl of nineteen ran impetuously into the shop, her dark curls hanging
in disorder on her bare shoulders, her bare arms stretched out in front of
her. Seeing Sanin, she rushed up to him at once, seized him by the hand, and
pulled him after her, saying in a breathless voice, "Quick, quick, here,
save him!" Not through disinclination to obey, but simply from excess
of amazement, Sanin did not at once follow the girl. He stood, as it were,
rooted to the spot; he had never in his life seen such a beautiful creature.
She turned towards him, and with such despair in her voice, in her eyes, in
the gesture of her clenched hand, which was lifted with a spasmodic movement
to her pale cheek, she articulated, "Come, come!" that he at once
darted after her to the open door.
In the room, into which he ran behind the girl, on an old- fashioned horse-hair
sofa, lay a boy of fourteen, white all over--white, with a yellowish tinge
like wax or old marble--he was strikingly like the girl, obviously her brother.
His eyes were closed, a patch of shadow fell from his thick black hair on
a forehead like stone, and delicate, motionless eyebrows; between the blue
lips could be seen clenched teeth. He seemed not to be breathing; one arm
hung down to the floor, the other he had tossed above his head. The boy was
dressed, and his clothes were closely buttoned; a tight cravat was twisted
round his neck.
The girl rushed up to him with a wail of distress. "He is dead, he is
dead!" she cried; "he was sitting here just now, talking to me--and
all of a sudden he fell down and became rigid. . . . My God! can nothing be
done to help him? And mamma not here! Pantaleone, Pantaleone, the doctor!"
she went on suddenly in Italian. "Have you been for the doctor?"
"Signora, I did not go, I sent Luise," said a hoarse voice at the
door, and a little bandy-legged old man came hobbling into the room in a lavender
frock coat with black buttons, a high white cravat, short nankeen trousers,
and blue worsted stockings. His diminutive little face was positively lost
in a mass of iron-grey hair. Standing up in all directions, and falling back
in ragged tufts, it gave the old man's figure a resemblance to a crested hen--a
resemblance the more striking, that under the dark-grey mass nothing could
be distinguished but a beak nose and round yellow eyes.
"Luise will run fast, and I can't run," the old man went on in Italian,
dragging his flat gouty feet, shod in high slippers with knots of ribbon.
"I've brought some water."
In his withered, knotted fingers, he clutched a long bottle neck.
"But meanwhile Emil will die!" cried the girl, and holding out her
hand to Sanin, "O, sir, O mein Herr! can't you do something for him?"
"He ought to be bled--it's an apoplectic fit," observed the old
man addressed as Pantaleone.
Though Sanin had not the slightest notion of medicine, he knew one thing for
certain, that boys of fourteen do not have apoplectic fits.
"It's a swoon, not a fit," he said, turning to Pantaleone. "Have
you got any brushes?"
The old man raised his little face. "Eh?"
"Brushes, brushes," repeated Sanin in German and in French. "Brushes," he added, making as though he would brush his clothes.
The little old man understood him at last.
"Ah, brushes! Spazzette! to be sure we have!"
"Bring them here; we will take off his coat and try rubbing him."
"Good . . . Benone! And ought we not to sprinkle water on his head?"
"No . . . later on; get the brushes now as quick as you can."
Pantaleone put the bottle on the floor, ran out and returned at once with
two brushes, one a hair-brush, and one a clothes-brush. A curly poodle followed
him in, and vigorously wagging its tail, it looked up inquisitively at the
old man, the girl, and even Sanin, as though it wanted to know what was the
meaning of all this fuss.
Sanin quickly took the boy's coat off, unbuttoned his collar, and pushed up
his shirtsleeves, and arming himself with a brush, he began brushing his chest
and arms with all his might. Pantaleone as zealously brushed away with the
other--the hair-brush--at his boots and trousers. The girl flung herself on
her knees by the sofa, and, clutching her head in both hands, fastened her
eyes, not an eyelash quivering, on her brother.
Sanin rubbed on, and kept stealing glances at her. Mercy! what a beautiful
creature she was!
Chapter III
HER nose was rather large, but handsome, aquiline-shaped; her upper lip was
shaded by a light down; but then the colour of her face, smooth, uniform,
like ivory or very pale milky amber, the wavering shimmer of her hair, like
that of the Judith of Allorio in the Palazzo-Pitti; and above all, her eyes,
dark-grey, with a black ring round the pupils, splendid, triumphant eyes,
even now, when terror and distress dimmed their lustre. . . . Sanin could
not help recalling the marvellous country he had just come from. . . . But
even in Italy he had never met anything like her! The girl drew slow, uneven
breaths; she seemed between each breath to be waiting to see whether her brother
would not begin to breathe.
Sanin went on rubbing him, but he did not only watch the girl. The original
figure of Pantaleone drew his attention too. The old man was quite exhausted
and panting; at every movement of the brush he hopped up and down and groaned
noisily, while his immense tufts of hair, soaked with perspiration, flapped
heavily from side to side, like the roots of some strong plant, torn up by
the water.
"You'd better, at least, take off his boots," Sanin was just saying
to him.
The poodle, probably excited by the unusualness of all the proceedings, suddenly
sank on to its front paws and began barking.
"Tartaglia--canaglia!" the old man hissed at it. But at that instant
the girl's face was transformed. Her eyebrows rose, her eyes grew wider, and
shone with joy.
Sanin looked round . . . A flush had overspread the lad's face; his eyelids
stirred . . . his nostrils twitched. He drew in a breath through his still
clenched teeth, sighed. . . .
"Emil!" cried the girl . . . "Emilio mio!"
Slowly the big black eyes opened. They still had a dazed look, but already
smiled faintly; the same faint smile hovered on his pale lips. Then he moved
the arm that hung down, and laid it on his chest.
"Emilio!" repeated the girl, and she got up. The expression on her
face was so tense and vivid, that it seemed that in an instant either she
would burst into tears or break into laughter.
"Emil! what is it? Emil!" was heard outside, and a neatly-dressed
lady with silvery grey hair and a dark face came with rapid steps into the
room.
A middle-aged man followed her; the head of a maid-servant was visible over
their shoulders.
The girl ran to meet them.
"He is saved, mother, he is alive!" she cried, impulsively embracing
the lady who had just entered.
"But what is it?" she repeated. "I come back . . . and all
of a sudden I meet the doctor and Luise . . ."
The girl proceeded to explain what had happened, while the doctor went up
to the invalid who was coming more and more to himself, and was still smiling:
he seemed to be beginning to feel shy at the commotion he had caused.
"You've been using friction with brushes, I see," said the doctor
to Sanin and Pantaleone, "and you did very well. . . . A very good idea
. . . and now let us see what further measures . . ."
He felt the youth's pulse. "H'm! show me your tongue!"
The lady bent anxiously over him. He smiled still more ingenuously, raised
his eyes to her, and blushed a little.
It struck Sanin that he was no longer wanted; he went into the shop. But before
he had time to touch the handle of the street-door, the girl was once more
before him; she stopped him.
"You are going," she began, looking warmly into his face; "I
will not keep you, but you must be sure to come to see us this evening: we
are so indebted to you--you, perhaps, saved my brother's life, we want to
thank you--mother wants to. You must tell us who you are, you must rejoice
with us . . ."
"But I am leaving for Berlin to-day," Sanin faltered out.
"You will have time though," the girl rejoined eagerly. "Come
to us in an hour's time to drink a cup of chocolate with us. You promise?
I must go back to him! You will come?"
What could Sanin do?
"I will come," he replied.
The beautiful girl pressed his hand, fluttered away, and he found himself
in the street.
Chapter IV
WHEN Sanin, an hour and a half later, returned to the Rosellis' shop he was
received there like one of the family. Emilio was sitting on the same sofa,
on which he had been rubbed; the doctor had prescribed him medicine and recommended "great discretion in avoiding strong emotions" as being a subject
of nervous temperament with a tendency to weakness of the heart. He had previously
been liable to fainting-fits; but never had he lost consciousness so completely
and for so long. However, the doctor declared that all danger was over. Emil,
as was only suitable for an invalid, was dressed in a comfortable dressing-gown;
his mother wound a blue woollen wrap round his neck; but he had a cheerful,
almost a festive air; indeed everything had a festive air. Before the sofa,
on a round table, covered with a clean cloth, towered a huge china coffee-pot,
filled with fragrant chocolate, and encircled by cups, decanters of liqueur,
biscuits and rolls, and even flowers; six slender wax candles were burning
in two old-fashioned silver chandeliers; on one side of the sofa, a comfortable
lounge-chair offered its soft embraces, and in this chair they made Sanin
sit. All the inhabitants of the confectioner's shop, with whom he had made
acquaintance that day, were present, not excluding the poodle, Tartaglia,
and the cat; they all seemed happy beyond expression; the poodle positively
sneezed with delight, only the cat was coy and blinked sleepily as before.
They made Sanin tell them who he was, where he came from, and what was his
name; when he said he was a Russian, both the ladies were a little surprised,
uttered ejaculations of wonder, and declared with one voice that he spoke
German splendidly; but if he preferred to speak French, he might make use
of that language, as they both understood it and spoke it well. Sanin at once
availed himself of this suggestion. "Sanin! Sanin!" The ladies would
never have expected that a Russian surname could be so easy to pronounce.
His Christian name--"Dimitri"--they liked very much too. The elder
lady observed that in her youth she had heard a fine opera--"Demetrio
e Polibio"--but that "Dimitri" was much nicer than "Demetrio."
In this way Sanin talked for about an hour. The ladies on their side initiated
him into all the details of their own life. The talking was mostly done by
the mother, the lady with grey hair. Sanin learnt from her that her name was
Leonora Roselli; that she had lost her husband, Giovanni Battista Roselli,
who had settled in Frankfort as a confectioner twenty-five years ago; that
Giovanni Battista had come from Vicenza and had been a most excellent, though
fiery and irascible man, and a republican withal! At those words Signora Roselli
pointed to his portrait, painted in oil-colours, and hanging over the sofa.
It must be presumed that the painter, "also a republican!" as Signora
Roselli observed with a sigh, had not fully succeeded in catching a likeness,
for in his portrait the late Giovanni Battista appeared as a morose and gloomy
brigand, after the style of Rinaldo Rinaldini! Signora Roselli herself had
come from "the ancient and splendid city of Parma where there is the
wonderful cupola, painted by the immortal Correggio!" But from her long
residence in Germany she had become almost completely Germanised. Then she
added, mournfully shaking her head, that all she had left was this daughter
and this son (pointing to each in turn with her finger); that the daughter's
name was Gemma, and the son's Emilio; that they were both very good and obedient
children--especially Emilio . . . ("Me not obedient!" her daughter
put in at that point "Oh, you're a republican, too!" answered her
mother). That the business, of course, was not what it had been in the days
of her husband, who had a great gift for the confectionery line . . . ("Un
grand uomo!" Pantaleone confirmed with a severe air); but that still,
thank God, they managed to get along!
Chapter V
GEMMA listened to her mother, and at one minute laughed, then sighed, then
patted her on the shoulder, and shook her finger at her, and then looked at
Sanin; at last, she got up, embraced her mother and kissed her in the hollow
of her neck, which made the latter laugh extremely and shriek a little. Pantaleone
too was presented to Sanin. It appeared he had once been an opera singer,
a baritone, but had long ago given up the theatre, and occupied in the Roselli
family a position between that of a family friend and a servant. In spite
of his prolonged residence in Germany, he had learnt very little German, and
only knew how to swear in it, mercilessly distorting even the terms of abuse. "Ferroflucto spitchebubbio" was his favourite epithet for almost
every German. He spoke Italian with a perfect accent--for was he not by birth
from Sinigali, where may be heard "lingua toscana in bocca romana"!
Emilio, obviously, played the invalid and indulged himself in the pleasant
sensations of one who has only just escaped a danger or is returning to health
after illness; it was evident, too, that the family spoiled him. He thanked
Sanin bashfully, but devoted himself chiefly to the biscuits and sweetmeats.
Sanin was compelled to drink two large cups of excellent chocolate, and to
eat a considerable number of biscuits; no sooner had he swallowed one than
Gemma offered him another--and to refuse was impossible! He soon felt at home:
the time flew by with incredible swiftness. He had to tell them a great deal--about
Russia in general, the Russian climate, Russian society, the Russian peasant--and
especially about the Cossacks; about the war of 1812, about Peter the Great,
about the Kremlin, and the Russian songs and bells. Both ladies had a very
faint conception of our vast and remote fatherland; Signora Roselli, or as
she was more often called, Frau Lenore, positively dumfoundered Sanin with
the question, whether there was still existing at Petersburg the celebrated
house of ice, built last century, about which she had lately read a very curious
article in one of her husband's books, "Bellezze delle arti." And
in reply to Sanin's exclamation, "Do you really suppose that there is
never any summer in Russia?" Frau Lenore replied that till then she had
always pictured Russia like this--eternal snow, every one going about in furs,
and all military men, but the greatest hospitality, and all the peasants very
submissive! Sanin tried to impart to her and her daughter some more exact
information. When the conversation touched on Russian music, they begged him
at once to sing some Russian air and showed him a diminutive piano with black
keys instead of white and white instead of black. He obeyed without making
much ado and accompanying himself with two fingers of the right hand and three
of the left (the first, second, and little finger) he sang in a thin nasal
tenor, first "The Sarafan," then "Along a Paved Street."
The ladies praised his voice and the music, but were more struck with the
softness and sonorousness of the Russian language and asked for a translation
of the text. Sanin complied with their wishes--but as the words of "The
Sarafan," and still more of "Along a Paved Street" (sur une
rue pavee une jeune fille allait a l'eau was how he rendered the sense of
the original) were not calculated to inspire his listeners with an exalted
idea of Russian poetry, he first recited, then translated, and then sang Pushkin's,
"I remember a marvellous moment," set to music by Glinka, whose
minor bars he did not render quite faithfully. Then the ladies went into ecstasies.
Frau Lenore positively discovered in Russian a wonderful likeness to the Italian.
Even the names Pushkin (she pronounced it Pussekin) and Glinka sounded somewhat
familiar to her. Sanin on his side begged the ladies to sing something; they
too did not wait to be pressed. Frau Lenore sat down to the piano and sang
with Gemma some duets and "stornelle." The mother had once had a
fine contralto; the daughter's voice was not strong, but was pleasing.
Chapter VI
BUT it was not Gemma's voice--it was herself Sanin was admiring. He was sitting
a little behind and on one side of her, and kept thinking to himself that
no palm-tree, even in the poems of Benediktov--the poet in fashion in those
days--could rival the slender grace of her figure. When, at the most emotional
passages, she raised her eyes upwards--it seemed to him no heaven could fail
to open at such a look! Even the old man, Pantaleone, who with his shoulder
propped against the doorpost, and his chin and mouth tucked into his capacious
cravat, was listening solemnly with the air of a connoisseur--even he was
admiring the girl's lovely face and marvelling at it, though one would have
thought he must have been used to it! When she had finished the duet with
her daughter, Frau Lenore observed that Emilio had a fine voice, like a silver
bell, but that now he was at the age when the voice changes--he did, in fact,
talk in a sort of bass constantly falling into falsetto--and that he was therefore
forbidden to sing; but that Pantaleone now really might try his skill of old
days in honour of their guest! Pantaleone promptly put on a displeased air,
frowned, ruffled up his hair, and declared that he had given it all up long
ago, though he could certainly in his youth hold his own, and indeed had belonged
to that great period, when there were real classical singers, not to be compared
to the squeaking performers of to-day! and a real school of singing; that
he, Pantaleone Cippatola of Varese, had once been brought a laurel wreath
from Modena, and that on that occasion some white doves had positively been
let fly in the theatre; that among others a Russian prince Tarbusky--"il
principe Tarbusski"--with whom he had been on the most friendly terms,
had after supper persistently invited him to Russia, promising him mountains
of gold, mountains! . . . but that he had been unwilling to leave Italy, the
land of Dante--il paese del Dante! Afterward, to be sure, there came unfortunate
circumstances, he had himself been imprudent. . . . At this point the old
man broke off, sighed deeply twice, looked dejected, and began again talking
of the classical period of singing, of the celebrated tenor Garcia, for whom
he cherished a devout, unbounded veneration. "He was a man!" he
exclaimed. "Never had the great Garcia (il gran Garcia) demeaned himself
by singing falsetto like the paltry tenors of to-day--tenoracci; always from
the chest, from the chest, voce di petto, si!" and the old man aimed
a vigorous blow with his little shrivelled fist at his own shirtfront! "And
what an actor! A volcano, signori miei, a volcano, un Vesuvio! I had the honour
and the happiness of singing with him in the opera dell" illustrissimo
maestro Rossini--in Otello! Garcia was Otello,--I was Iago--and when he rendered
the phrase:--here Pantaleone threw himself into an attitude and began singing
in a hoarse and shaky, but still moving voice:
"L'i . . . ra daver. . . so daver... so il fato Ia piu no . . . no .
. . no. . . non temero!"
The theatre was all a-quiver, signori miei! though I too did not fall short,
I too after him.
"L'i ra daver. . . so daver. . . so il fato Temer piu non davro!"
And all of a sudden, he crashed like lightning, like a tiger: "Morro!
. . . ma vendicato . . . Again when he was singing . . . when he was singing
that celebrated air from "Matrimonio segreto," Pria che spunti.
. . then he, il gran Garcia, after the words, "I cavalli di galoppo"--at
the words, "Senza posa cacciera,"--listen, how stupendous, come
e stupendo! At that point he made . . ." The old man began a sort of
extraordinary flourish, and at the tenth note broke down, cleared his throat,
and with a wave of his arm turned away, muttering, "Why do you torment
me?" Gemma jumped up at once and clapping loudly and shouting, bravo!
. . . bravo! . . . she ran to the poor old superannuated Iago and with both
hands patted him affectionately on the shoulders. Only Emil laughed ruthlessly.
Cet age est sans pitie--that age knows no mercy--Lafontaine has said already.
Sanin tried to soothe the aged singer and began talking to him in Italian--(he
had picked up a smattering during his last tour there)--began talking of "paese
del Dante, dove il si suona." This phrase, together with "Lasciate
ogni speranza," made up the whole stock of poetic Italian of the young
tourist; but Pantaleone was not won over by his blandishments. Tucking his
chin deeper than ever into his cravat and sullenly rolling his eyes, he was
once more like a bird, an angry one too,--a crow or a kite. Then Emil, with
a faint momentary blush, such as one so often sees in spoilt children, addressing
his sister, said if she wanted to entertain their guest, she could do nothing
better than read him one of those little comedies of Malz, that she read so
nicely. Gemma laughed, slapped her brother on the arm, exclaimed that he "always
had such ideas!" She went promptly, however, to her room, and returning
thence with a small book in her hand, seated herself at the table before the
lamp, looked round, lifted one finger as much as to say, "hush!"--a
typically Italian gesture--and began reading.
Chapter VII
MALZ was a writer flourishing at Frankfort about 1830, whose short comedies,
written in a light vein in the local dialect, hit off local Frankfort types
with bright and amusing, though not deep, humour. It turned out that Gemma
really did read excellently--quite like an actress in fact. She indicated
each personage, and sustained the character capitally, making full use of
the talent of mimicry she had inherited with her Italian blood; she had no
mercy on her soft voice or her lovely face, and when she had to represent
some old crone in her dotage, or a stupid burgomaster, she made the drollest
grimaces, screwing up her eyes, wrinkling up her nose, lisping, squeaking.
. . . She did not herself laugh during the reading; but when her audience
(with the exception of Pantaleone: he had walked off in indignation so soon
as the conversation turned o quel ferroflucto Tedesco) interrupted her by
an outburst of unanimous laughter, she dropped the book on her knee, and laughed
musically too, her head thrown back, and her black hair dancing in little
ringlets on her neck and her shaking shoulders. When the laughter ceased,
she picked up the book at once, and again resuming a suitable expression,
began the reading seriously. Sanin could not get over his admiration; he was
particularly astonished at the marvellous way in which a face so ideally beautiful
assumed suddenly a comic, sometimes almost a vulgar expression. Gemma was
less successful in the parts of young girls--of so-called "jeunes premieres";
in the love-scenes in particular she failed; she was conscious of this herself,
and for that reason gave them a faint shade of irony as though she did not
quite believe in all these rapturous vows and elevated sentiments, of which
the author, however, was himself rather sparing--so far as he could be.
Sanin did not notice how the evening was flying by, and only recollected the
journey before him when the clock struck ten. He leaped up from his seat as
though he had been stung.
"What is the matter?" inquired Frau Lenore.
"Why, I had to start for Berlin to-night, and I have taken a place in
the diligence!"
"And when does the diligence start?"
"At half-past ten!"
"Well, then, you won't catch it now," observed Gemma; "you
must stay . . . and I will go on reading."
"Have you paid the whole fare or only given a deposit?" Frau Lenore
queried.
"The whole fare!" Sanin said dolefully with a gloomy face.
Gemma looked at him, half closed her eyes, and laughed, while her mother scolded
her: "The young gentleman has paid away his money for nothing, and you
laugh!"
"Never mind," answered Gemma; "it won't ruin him, and we will
try and amuse him. Will you have some lemonade?"
Sanin drank a glass of lemonade, Gemma took up Malz once more; and all went
merrily again.
The clock struck twelve. Sanin rose to take leave.
"You must stay some days now in Frankfort," said Gemma: "why
should you hurry away? It would be no nicer in any other town." She paused.
"It wouldn't, really," she added with a smile. Sanin made no reply,
and reflected that considering the emptiness of his purse, he would have no
choice about remaining in Frankfort till he got an answer from a friend in
Berlin, to whom he proposed writing for money.
"Yes, do stay," urged Frau Lenore too. "We will introduce you
to Mr. Karl Kluber, who is engaged to Gemma. He could not come today, as he
was very busy at his shop . . . you must have seen the biggest draper's and
silk mercer's shop in the Zeile. Well, he is the manager there. But he will
be delighted to call on you himself."
Sanin--heaven knows why--was slightly disconcerted by this piece of information. "He's a lucky fellow, that fiance!" flashed across his mind. He
looked at Gemma, and fancied he detected an ironical look in her eyes. He
began saying good-bye.
"Till to-morrow? Till to-morrow, isn't it?" queried Frau Lenore.
"Till to-morrow!" Gemma declared in a tone not of interrogation,
but of affirmation, as though it could not be otherwise.
"Till to-morrow!" echoed Sanin.
Emil, Pantaleone, and the poodle Tartaglia accompanied him to the corner of
the street. Pantaleone could not refrain from expressing his displeasure at
Gemma's reading.
"She ought to be ashamed! She mouths and whines, una caricatura! She
ought to represent Merope or Clytemnaestra--something grand, tragic--and she
apes some wretched German woman! I can do that . . . merz, kerz, smerz," he went on in a hoarse voice poking his face forward, and brandishing his
fingers. Tartaglia began barking at him, while Emil burst out laughing. The
old man turned sharply back.
Sanin went back to the White Swan (he had left his things there in the public
hall) in a rather confused frame of mind. All the talk he had had in French,
German, and Italian was ringing in his ears.
"Engaged!" he whispered as he lay in bed, in the modest apartment
assigned to him. "And what a beauty! But what did I stay for?"
Next day he sent a letter to his friend in Berlin.
Chapter VIII
HE had not finished dressing, when a waiter announced the arrival of two gentlemen.
One of them turned out to be Emil; the other, a good-looking and well-grown
young man, with a handsome face, was Herr Karl Kluber, the betrothed of the
lovely Gemma.
One may safely assume that at that time in all Frankfort, there was not in
a single shop a manager as civil, as decorous, as dignified, and as affable
as Herr Kluber. The irreproachable perfection of his get-up was on a level
with the dignity of his deportment, with the elegance--a little affected and
stiff, it is true, in the English style (he had spent two years in England)--but
still fascinating, elegance of his manners! It was clear from the first glance
that this handsome, rather severe, excellently brought-up and superbly washed
young man was accustomed to obey his superior and to command his inferior,
and that behind the counter of his shop he must infallibly inspire respect
even in his customers! Of his supernatural honesty there could never be a
particle of doubt: one had but to look at his stiffly starched collars! And
his voice, it appeared, was just what one would expect; deep, and of a self-confident
richness, but not too loud, with positively a certain caressing note in its
timbre. Such a voice was peculiarly fitted to give orders to assistants under
his control: "Show the crimson Lyons velvet!" or, "Hand the
lady a chair!"
Herr Kluber began with introducing himself; as he did so, he bowed with such
loftiness, moved his legs with such an agreeable air, and drew his heels together
with such polished courtesy that no one could fail to feel, "that man
has both linen and moral principles of the first quality!" The finish
of his bare right hand--(the left, in a suede glove, held a hat shining like
a looking-glass, with the right glove placed within it)--the finish of the
right hand, proffered modestly but resolutely to Sanin, surpassed all belief;
each finger-nail was a perfection in its own way! Then he proceeded to explain
in the choicest German that he was anxious to express his respect and his
indebtedness to the foreign gentleman who had performed so signal a service
to his future kinsman, the brother of his betrothed; as he spoke, he waved
his left hand with the hat in it in the direction of Emil, who seemed bashful
and turning away to the window, put his finger in his mouth. Herr Kluber added
that he should esteem himself happy should he be able in return to do anything
for the foreign gentleman. Sanin, with some difficulty, replied, also in German,
that he was delighted . . . that the service was not worth speaking of . .
. and he begged his guests to sit down. Herr Kluber thanked him, and lifting
his coat-tails, sat down on a chair; but he perched there so lightly and with
such a transitory air that no one could fail to realise, "this man is
sitting down from politeness, and will fly up again in an instant." And
he did in fact fly up again quickly, and advancing with two discreet little
dance-steps, he announced that to his regret he was unable to stay any longer,
as he had to hasten to his shop--business before everything! but as the next
day was Sunday, he had, with the consent of Frau Lenore and Fraulein Gemma,
arranged a holiday excursion to Soden, to which he had the honour of inviting
the foreign gentleman, and he cherished the hope that he would not refuse
to grace the party with his presence. Sanin did not refuse so to grace it;
and Herr Kluber repeating once more his complimentary sentiments, took leave,
his pea-green trousers making a spot of cheerful colour, and his brand-new
boots squeaking cheerfully as he moved.
Chapter IX
EMIL, who had continued to stand with his face to the window, even after Sanin's
invitation to him to sit down, turned round directly his future kinsman had
gone out, and with a childish pout and blush, asked Sanin if he might remain
a little while with him. "I am much better to-day," he added, "but
the doctor has forbidden me to do any work."
"Stay by all means! You won't be in the least in my way," Sanin
cried at once. Like every true Russian he was glad to clutch at any excuse
that saved him from the necessity of doing anything himself.
Emil thanked him, and in a very short time he was completely at home with
him and with his room; he looked at all his things, asked him about almost
every one of them, where he had bought it, and what was its value. He helped
him to shave, observing that it was a mistake not to let his moustache grow;
and finally told him a number of details about his mother, his sister, Pantaleone,
the poodle Tartaglia, and all their daily life. Every semblance of timidity
vanished in Emil; he suddenly felt extraordinarily attracted to Sanin--not
at all because he had saved his life the day before, but because he was such
a nice person! He lost no time in confiding all his secrets to Sanin. He expatiated
with special warmth on the fact that his mother was set on making him a shopkeeper,
while he knew, knew for certain, that he was born an artist, a musician, a
singer; that Pantaleone even encouraged him, but that Herr Kluber supported
mamma, over whom he had great influence; that the very idea of his being a
shopkeeper really originated with Herr Kluber, who considered that nothing
in the world could compare with trade! To measure out cloth--and cheat the
public, extorting from it "Narren--oder Russen Preise" (fools'--or
Russian prices)--that was his ideal! (1)
(1) In former days--and very likely it is not different now--when, from May
onwards, a great number of Russians visited Frankfort, prices rose in all
the shops, and were called "Russians'," or, alas! "fools' prices."
"Come! now you must come and see us!" he cried, directly Sanin had
finished his toilet and written his letter to Berlin.
"It's early yet," observed Sanin.
"That's no matter," replied Emil caressingly. "Come along!
We'll go to the post--and from there to our place. Gemma will be so glad to
see you! You must have lunch with us. . . . You might say a word to mamma
about me, my career. . . ."
"Very well, let's go," said Sanin, and they set off.
Chapter X
GEMMA certainly was delighted to see him, and Frau Lenore gave him a very
friendly welcome; he had obviously made a good impression on both of them
the evening before. Emil ran to see to getting lunch ready, after a preliminary
whisper, "don't forget!" in Sanin's ear.
"I won't forget," responded Sanin.
Frau Lenore was not quite well; she had a sick headache, and, half-lying down
in an easy chair, she tried to keep perfectly still. Gemma wore a full yellow
blouse, with a black leather belt round the waist; she too seemed exhausted,
and was rather pale; there were dark rings round her eyes, but their lustre
was not the less for it; it added something of charm and mystery to the classical
lines of her face. Sanin was especially struck that day by the exquisite beauty
of her hands; when she smoothed and put back her dark, glossy tresses he could
not take his eyes off her long supple fingers, held slightly apart from one
another like the hand of Raphael's Fornarina.
It was very hot out-of-doors; after lunch Sanin was about to take leave, but
they told him that on such a day the best thing was to stay where one was,
and he agreed; he stayed. In the back room where he was sitting with the ladies
of the household, coolness reigned supreme; the windows looked out upon a
little garden overgrown with acacias. Multitudes of bees, wasps, and humming
beetles kept up a steady, eager buzz in their thick branches, which were studded
with golden blossoms; through the half-drawn curtains and the lowered blinds
this never-ceasing hum made its way into the room, telling of the sultry heat
in the air outside, and making the cool of the closed and snug abode seem
the sweeter.
Sanin talked a great deal, as on the day before, but not of Russia, nor of
Russian life. Being anxious to please his young friend, who had been sent
off to Herr Kluber's immediately after lunch, to acquire a knowledge of bookkeeping,
he turned the conversation on the comparative advantages and disadvantages
of art and commerce. He was not surprised at Frau Lenore's standing up for
commerce--he had expected that; but Gemma too shared her opinion.
"If one's an artist, and especially a singer," she declared with
a vigorous downward sweep of her hand, "one's got to be first-rate! Second-rate's
worse than nothing; and who can tell if one will arrive at being first-rate?"
Pantaleone, who took part too in the conversation--(as an old servant and
an old man he had the privilege of sitting down in the presence of the ladies
of the house; Italians are not, as a rule, strict in matters of etiquette)--Pantaleone,
as a matter of course, stood like a rock for art. To tell the truth, his arguments
were somewhat feeble; he kept expatiating for the most part on the necessity,
before all things, of possessing "un certo estro d'inspirazione"--a
certain force of inspiration! Frau Lenore remarked to him that he had, to
be sure, possessed such an "estro"--and yet . . . "I had enemies,"
Pantaleone observed gloomily. "And how do you know that Emil will not
have enemies, even if this "estro" is found in him?" "Very
well, make a tradesman of him, then," retorted Pantaleone in vexation;
"but Giovan' Battista would never have done it, though he was a confectioner
himself!" "Giovan' Battista, my husband, was a reasonable man, and
even though he was in his youth led away . . ." But the old man would
hear nothing more, and walked away, repeating reproachfully, "Ah! Giovan'
Battista! . . ." Gemma exclaimed that if Emil felt like a patriot, and
wanted to devote all his powers to the liberation of Italy, then, of course,
for such a high and holy cause he might sacrifice the security of the future--but
not for the theatre! Thereupon Frau Lenore became much agitated, and began
to implore her daughter to refrain at least from turning her brother's head,
and to content herself with being such a desperate republican herself! Frau
Lenore groaned as she uttered these words, and began complaining of her head,
which was "ready to split." (Frau Lenore, in deference to their
guest, talked to her daughter in French.)
Gemma began at once to wait upon her; she moistened her forehead with eau-de-cologne,
gently blew on it, gently kissed her cheek, made her lay her head on a pillow,
forbade her to speak, and kissed her again. Then, turning to Sanin, she began
telling him in a half-joking, half-tender tone what a splendid mother she
had, and what a beauty she had been. ""Had been," did I say?
she is charming now! Look, look, what eyes!"
Gemma instantly pulled a white handkerchief out of her pocket, covered her
mother's face with it, and slowly drawing it downwards, gradually uncovered
Frau Lenore's forehead, eyebrows, and eyes; she waited a moment and asked
her to open them. Her mother obeyed; Gemma cried out in ecstasy (Frau Lenore's
eyes really were very beautiful), and rapidly sliding the handkerchief over
the lower, less regular part of the face, fell to kissing her again. Frau
Lenore laughed, and turning a little away, with a pretence of violence, pushed
her daughter away. She too pretended to struggle with her mother, and lavished
caresses on her--not like a cat, in the French manner, but with that special
Italian grace in which is always felt the presence of power.
At last Frau Lenore declared she was tired out. . . Then Gemma at once advised
her to have a little nap, where she was, in her chair, "and I and the
Russian gentleman--"avec le monsieur russe"--will be as quiet, as
quiet . . . as little mice . . . "comme des petites souris.""
Frau Lenore smiled at her in reply, closed her eyes, and after a few sighs
began to doze. Gemma quickly dropped down on a bench beside her and did not
stir again, only from time to time she put a finger of one hand to her lips--with
the other hand she was holding up a pillow behind her mother's head--and said
softly, "sh--sh!" with a sidelong look at Sanin, if he permitted
himself the smallest movement. In the end he too sank into a kind of dream,
and sat motionless as though spell-bound, while all his faculties were absorbed
in admiring the picture presented him by the half-dark room, here and there
spotted with patches of light crimson, where fresh, luxuriant roses stood
in the old-fashioned green glasses, and the sleeping woman with demurely folded
hands and kind, weary face, framed in the snowy whiteness of the pillow, and
the young, keenly-alert and also kind, clever, pure, and unspeakably beautiful
creature with such black, deep, overshadowed, yet shining eyes. . . . What
was it? A dream? a fairy tale? And how came he to be in it?
Chapter XI
THE bell tinkled at the outer door. A young peasant lad in a fur cap and a
red waistcoat came into the shop from the street. Not one customer had looked
into it since early morning . . . "You see how much business we do!"
Frau Lenore observed to Sanin at lunch-time with a sigh. She was still asleep;
Gemma was afraid to take her arm from the pillow, and whispered to Sanin:
"You go, and mind the shop for me!" Sanin went on tiptoe into the
shop at once. The boy wanted a quarter of a pound of peppermints. "How
much must I take?" Sanin whispered from the door to Gemma. "Six
kreutzers!" she answered in the same whisper. Sanin weighed out a quarter
of a pound, found some paper, twisted it into a cone, tipped the peppermints
into it, spilt them, tipped them in again, spilt them again, at last handed
them to the boy, and took the money. . . . The boy gazed at him in amazement,
twisting his cap in his hands on his stomach, and in the next room, Gemma
was stifling with suppressed laughter. Before the first customer had walked
out, a second appeared, then a third. . . . "I bring luck, it's clear!" thought Sanin. The second customer wanted a glass of orangeade, the third,
half-a-pound of sweets. Sanin satisfied their needs, zealously clattering
the spoons, changing the saucers, and eagerly plunging his fingers into drawers
and jars. On reckoning up, it appeared that he had charged too little for
the orangeade, and taken two kreutzers too much for the sweets. Gemma did
not cease laughing softly, and Sanin too was aware of an extraordinary lightness
of heart, a peculiarly happy state of mind. He felt as if he had for ever
been standing behind the counter and dealing in orangeade and sweetmeats,
with that exquisite creature looking at him through the doorway with affectionately
mocking eyes, while the summer sun, forcing its way through the sturdy leafage
of the chestnuts that grew in front of the windows, filled the whole room
with the greenish-gold of the midday light and shade, and the heart grew soft
in the sweet languor of idleness, carelessness, and youth--first youth!
A fourth customer asked for a cup of coffee; Pantaleone had to be appealed
to. (Emil had not yet come back from Herr Kluber's shop.) Sanin went and sat
by Gemma again. Frau Lenore still went on sleeping, to her daughter's great
delight. "Mamma always sleeps off her sick headaches," she observed.
Sanin began talking--in a whisper, of course, as before--of his minding the
shop; very seriously inquired the price of various articles of confectionery;
Gemma just as seriously told him these prices, and meanwhile both of them
were inwardly laughing together, as though conscious they were playing in
a very amusing farce. All of a sudden, an organ-grinder in the street began
playing an air from the Freischutz: "Durch die Felder, durch die Auen
. . ." The dance tune fell shrill and quivering on the motionless air.
Gemma started . . . "He will wake mamma!" Sanin promptly darted
out into the street, thrust a few kreutzers into the organ-grinder's hand,
and made him cease playing and move away. When he came back, Gemma thanked
him with a little nod of the head, and with a pensive smile she began herself
just audibly humming the beautiful melody of Weber's, in which Max expresses
all the perplexities of first love. Then she asked Sanin whether he knew "Freischutz," whether he was fond of Weber, and added that though she was herself an Italian,
she liked such music best of all. From Weber the conversation glided off on
to poetry and romanticism, on to Hoffmann, whom every one was still reading
at that time.
And Frau Lenore still slept, and even snored just a little, and the sunbeams,
piercing in narrow streaks through the shutters, were incessantly and imperceptibly
shifting and travelling over the floor, the furniture, Gemma's dress, and
the leaves and petals of the flowers.
Chapter XII
IT appeared that Gemma was not very fond of Hoffmann, that she even thought
him . . . tedious! The fantastic, misty northern element in his stories was
too remote from her clear, southern nature. "It's all fairy-tales, all
written for children!" she declared with some contempt. She was vaguely
conscious, too, of the lack of poetry in Hoffmann. But there was one of his
stories, the title of which she had forgotten, which she greatly liked; more
precisely speaking, it was only the beginning of this story that she liked;
the end she had either not read or had forgotten. The story was about a young
man who in some place, a sort of restaurant perhaps, meets a girl of striking
beauty, a Greek; she is accompanied by a mysterious and strange, wicked old
man. The young man falls in love with the girl at first sight; she looks at
him so mournfully, as though beseeching him to deliver her. . . . He goes
out for an instant, and, coming back into the restaurant, finds there neither
the girl nor the old man; he rushes off in pursuit of her, continually comes
upon fresh traces of her, follows them up, and can never by any means come
upon her anywhere. The lovely girl has vanished for him for ever and ever,
and he is never able to forget her imploring glance, and is tortured by the
thought that all the happiness of his life, perhaps, has slipped through his
fingers.
Hoffmann does not end his story quite in that way; but so it had taken shape,
so it had remained, in Gemma's memory.
"I fancy," she said, "such meetings and such partings happen
oftener in the world than we suppose."
Sanin was silent . . . and soon after he began talking . . . of Herr Kluber.
It was the first time he had referred to him; he had not once remembered him
till that instant.
Gemma was silent in her turn, and sank into thought, biting the nail of her
forefinger and fixing her eyes away. Then she began to speak in praise of
her betrothed, alluded to the excursion he had planned for the next day, and,
glancing swiftly at Sanin, was silent again.
Sanin did not know on what subject to turn the conversation.
Emil ran in noisily and waked Frau Lenore . . . Sanin was relieved by his
appearance.
Frau Lenore got up from her low chair. Pantaleone came in and announced that
dinner was ready. The friend of the family, ex-singer, and servant also performed
the duties of cook.
Chapter XIII
SANIN stayed on after dinner too. They did not let him go, still on the same
pretext of the terrible heat; and when the heat began to decrease, they proposed
going out into the garden to drink coffee in the shade of the acacias. Sanin
consented. He felt very happy. In the quietly monotonous, smooth current of
life lie hid great delights, and he gave himself up to these delights with
zest, asking nothing much of the present day, but also thinking nothing of
the morrow, nor recalling the day before. How much the mere society of such
a girl as Gemma meant to him! He would shortly part from her and, most likely,
for ever; but so long as they were borne, as in Uhland's song, in one skiff
over the sea of life, untossed by tempest, well might the traveller rejoice
and be glad. And everything seemed sweet and delightful to the happy voyager.
Frau Lenore offered to play against him and Pantaleone at "tresette,"
instructed him in this not complicated Italian game, and won a few kreutzers
from him, and he was well content. Pantaleone, at Emil's request, made the
poodle, Tartaglia, perform all his tricks, and Tartaglia jumped over a stick
"spoke," that is, barked, sneezed, shut the door with his nose,
fetched his master's trodden-down slippers; and, finally, with an old cap
on his head, he portrayed Marshal Bernadotte, subjected to the bitterest upbraidings
by the Emperor Napoleon on account of his treachery. Napoleon's part was,
of course, performed by Pantaleone, and very faithfully he performed it: he
folded his arms across his chest, pulled a cocked hat over his eyes, and spoke
very gruffly and sternly, in French--and heavens! what French! Tartaglia sat
before his sovereign, all huddled up, with dejected tail, and eyes blinking
and twitching in confusion, under the peak of his cap which was stuck on awry;
from time to time when Napoleon raised his voice, Bernadotte rose on his hind
paws. "Fuori, traditore!" cried Napoleon at last, forgetting in
the excess of his wrath that he had to sustain his role as a Frenchman to
the end; and Bernadotte promptly flew under the sofa, but quickly darted out
again with a joyful bark, as though to announce that the performance was over.
All the spectators laughed, and Sanin more than all.
Gemma had a particularly charming, continual, soft laugh, with very droll
little shrieks. . . . Sanin was fairly enchanted by that laugh--he could have
kissed her for those shrieks!
Night came on at last. He had in decency to take leave! After saying good-bye
several times over to every one, and repeating several times to all, "till
to-morrow!"--Emil he went so far as to kiss--Sanin started home, carrying
with him the image of the young girl, at one time laughing, at another thoughtful,
calm, and even indifferent--but always attractive! Her eyes, at one time wide
open, clear and bright as day, at another time half shrouded by the lashes
and deep and dark as night, seemed to float before his eyes, piercing in a
strange sweet way across all other images and recollections.
Of Herr Kluber, of the causes impelling him to remain in Frankfort--in short,
of everything that had disturbed his mind the evening before--he never thought
once.
Chapter XIV
WE must, however, say a few words about Sanin himself.
In the first place, he was very, very good-looking. A handsome , graceful
figure, agreeable, rather unformed features, kindly bluish eyes, golden hair,
a clear white and red skin, and, above all, that peculiar, naively-cheerful,
confiding, open, at the first glance, somewhat foolish expression, by which
in former days one could recognise directly the children of steady-going,
noble families, "sons of their fathers," fine young landowners,
born and reared in our open, half-wild country parts,--a hesitating gait,
a voice with a lisp, a smile like a child's the minute you looked at him .
. . lastly, freshness, health, softness, softness, softness,--there you have
the whole of Sanin. And secondly, he was not stupid and had picked up a fair
amount of knowledge. Fresh he had remained, for all his foreign tour; the
disturbing emotions in which the greater part of the young people of that
day were tempest-tossed were very little known to him.
Of late years, in response to the assiduous search for "new types,"
young men have begun to appear in our literature, determined at all hazards
to be "fresh" . . . as fresh as Flensburg oysters, when they reach
Petersburg. . . . Sanin was not like them. Since we have had recourse already
to simile, he rather recalled a young, leafy, freshly-grafted apple-tree in
one of our fertile orchards--or better still, a well-groomed, sleek, sturdy-limbed,
tender young "three-year-old" in some old-fashioned seignorial stud
stable, a young horse that they have hardly begun to break in to the traces.
. . . Those who came across Sanin in later years, when life had knocked him
about a good deal, and the sleekness and plumpness of youth had long vanished,
saw in him a totally different man.
Next day Sanin was still in bed when Emil, in his best clothes, with a cane
in his hand and much pomade on his head, burst into his room, announcing that
Herr Kluber would be here directly with the carriage, that the weather promised
to be exquisite, that they had everything ready by now, but that mamma was
not going, as her head was bad again. He began to hurry Sanin, telling him
that there was not a minute to lose. . . . And Herr Kluber did, in fact, find
Sanin still at his toilet. He knocked at the door, came in, bowed with a bend
from the waist, expressed his readiness to wait as long as might be desired,
and sat down, his hat balanced elegantly on his knees. The handsome shop-manager
had got himself up and perfumed himself to excess: his every action was accompanied
by a powerful whiff of the most refined aroma. He arrived in a comfortable
open carriage--one of the kind called landau--drawn by two tall and powerful
but not well-shaped horses. A quarter of an hour later Sanin, Kluber, and
Emil, in this same carriage, drew up triumphantly at the steps of the confectioner's
shop. Madame Roselli resolutely refused to join the party; Gemma wanted to
stay with her mother; but she simply turned her out.
"I don't want any one," she declared; "I shall go to sleep.
I would send Pantaleone with you too, only there would be no one to mind the
shop."
"May we take Tartaglia?" asked Emil.
"Of course you may."
Tartaglia immediately scrambled, with delighted struggles, on to the box and
sat there, licking himself; it was obviously a thing he was accustomed to.
Gemma put on a large straw hat with brown ribbons; the hat was bent down in
front, so as to shade almost the whole of her face from the sun. The line
of shadow stopped just at her lips; they wore a tender maiden flush, like
the petals of a centifoil rose, and her teeth gleamed stealthily--innocently
too, as when children smile. Gemma sat facing the horses, with Sanin; Kluber
and Emil sat opposite. The pale face of Frau Lenore appeared at the window;
Gemma waved her handkerchief to her, and the horses started.
Chapter XV
SODEN is a little town half an hour's distance from Frankfort. It lies in
a beautiful country among the spurs of the Taunus Mountains, and is known
among us in Russia for its waters, which are supposed to be beneficial to
people with weak lungs. The Frankforters visit it more for purposes of recreation,
as Soden possesses a fine park and various "wirthschaften," where
one may drink beer and coffee in the shade of the tall limes and maples. The
road from Frankfort to Soden runs along the right bank of the Maine, and is
planted all along with fruit trees. While the carriage was rolling slowly
along an excellent road, Sanin stealthily watched how Gemma behaved to her
betrothed; it was the first time he had seen them together. She was quiet
and simple in her manner, but rather more reserved and serious than usual;
he had the air of a condescending schoolmaster, permitting himself and those
under his authority a discreet and decorous pleasure. Sanin saw no signs in
him of any marked attentiveness, of what the French call "empressement,"
in his demeanour to Gemma. It was clear that Herr Kluber considered that it
was a matter settled once for all, and that therefore he saw no reason to
trouble or excite himself. But his condescension never left him for an instant!
Even during a long ramble before dinner about the wooded hills and valleys
behind Soden, even when enjoying the beauties of nature, he treated nature
itself with the same condescension, through which his habitual magisterial
severity peeped out from time to time. So, for example, he observed in regard
to one stream that it ran too straight through the glade, instead of making
a few picturesque curves; he disapproved, too, of the conduct of a bird--a
chaffinch--for singing so monotonously. Gemma was not bored, and even, apparently,
was enjoying herself; but Sanin did not recognise her as the Gemma of the
preceding days; it was not that she seemed under a cloud--her beauty had never
been more dazzling--but her soul seemed to have withdrawn into herself. With
her parasol open and her gloves still buttoned up, she walked sedately, deliberately,
as well-bred young girls walk, and spoke little. Emil, too, felt stiff and
Sanin more so than all. He was somewhat embarrassed too by the fact that the
conversation was all the time in German. Only Tartaglia was in high spirits!
He darted, barking frantically, after blackbirds, leaped over ravines, stumps
and roots, rushed headlong into the water, lapped at it in desperate haste,
shook himself, whining, and was off like an arrow, his red tongue trailing
after him almost to his shoulder. Herr Kluber, for his part, did everything
he supposed conducive to the mirthfulness of the company; he begged them to
sit down in the shade of a spreading oak-tree, and taking out of a side pocket
a small booklet entitled, "Knallerbsen; oder du sollst und wirst lacken!" (Squibs; or you must and shall laugh!) began reading the funny anecdotes of
which the little book was full. He read them twelve specimens; he aroused
very little mirth, however; only Sanin smiled, from politeness, and he himself,
Herr Kluber, after each anecdote, gave vent to a brief, business-like, but
still condescending laugh. At twelve o'clock the whole party returned to Soden
to the best tavern there.
They had to make arrangements about dinner. Herr Kluber proposed that the
dinner should be served in a summer-house closed in on all sides--"im
Gartensalon" but at this point Gemma rebelled and declared that she would
have dinner in the open air, in the garden, at one of the little tables set
before the tavern; that she was tired of being all the while with the same
faces, and she wanted to see fresh ones. At some of the little tables, groups
of visitors were already sitting.
While Herr Kluber, yielding condescendingly to "the caprice of his betrothed," went off to interview the head waiter, Gemma stood immovable, biting her lips
and looking on the ground; she was conscious that Sanin was persistently and,
as it were, inquiringly looking at her--it seemed to enrage her. At last Herr
Kluber returned, announced that dinner would be ready in half an hour, and
proposed their employing the interval in a game of skittles, adding that this
was very good for the appetite, he, he, he! Skittles he played in masterly
fashion; as he threw the ball, he put himself into amazingly heroic postures,
with artistic play of the muscles, with artistic flourish and shake of the
leg. In his own way he was an athlete--and was superbly built! His hands,
too, were so white and handsome, and he wiped them on such a sumptuous, gold-striped
Indian bandana!
The moment of dinner arrived, and the whole party seated themselves at the
table.
Chapter XVI
WHO does not know what a German dinner is like? Watery soup with knobby dumplings
and pieces of cinnamon, boiled beef dry as cork, with white fat attached,
slimy potatoes, soft beetroot and mashed horseradish, a bluish eel with French
capers and vinegar, a roast joint with jam, and the inevitable "Mehlspeise,"
something of the nature of a pudding with sourish red sauce; but to make up,
the beer and wine first-rate! With just such a dinner the tavern-keeper at
Soden regaled his customers. The dinner, itself, however, went off satisfactorily.
No special liveliness was perceptible, certainly not even when Herr Kluber
proposed the toast "What we like!" (Was wir lieben!) But at least
everything was decorous and seemly. After dinner, coffee was served, thin,
reddish, typically German coffee. Herr Kluber, with true gallantry, asked
Gemma's permission to smoke a cigar. . . . But at this point suddenly something
occurred, unexpected, and decidedly unpleasant, and even unseemly!
At one of the tables near were sitting several officers of the garrison of
the Maine. From their glances and whispering together it was easy to perceive
that they were struck by Gemma's beauty; one of them, who had probably stayed
in Frankfort, stared at her persistently, as at a figure familiar to him;
he obviously knew who she was. He suddenly got up, and glass in hand--all
the officers had been drinking hard, and the cloth before them was crowded
with bottles--approached the table at which Gemma was sitting. He was a very
young flaxen-haired man, with a rather pleasing and even attractive face,
but his features were distorted with the wine he had drunk, his cheeks were
twitching, his blood-shot eyes wandered, and wore an insolent expression.
His companions at first tried to hold him back, but afterwards let him go,
interested apparently to see what he would do, and how it would end. Slightly
unsteady on his legs, the officer stopped before Gemma, and in an unnaturally
screaming voice, in which, in spite of himself, an inward struggle could be
discerned, he articulated, "I drink to the health of the prettiest confectioner
in all Frankfort, in all the world (he emptied his glass), and in return I
take this flower, picked by her divine little fingers!" He took from
the table a rose that lay beside Gemma's plate. At first she was astonished,
alarmed, and turned fearfully white . . . then alarm was replaced by indignation;
she suddenly crimsoned all over, to her very hair--and her eyes, fastened
directly on the offender, at the same time darkened and flamed, they were
filled with black gloom, and burned with the fire of irrepressible fury. The
officer must have been confused by this look; he muttered something unintelligible,
bowed, and walked back to his friends. They greeted him with a laugh, and
faint applause.
Herr Kluber rose spasmodically from his seat, drew himself up to his full
height, and putting on his hat pronounced with dignity, but not too loud, "Unheard of! Unheard of! Unheard of impertinence!" and at once calling
up the waiter, in a severe voice asked for the bill . . . more than that,
ordered the carriage to be put to, adding that it was impossible for respectable
people to frequent the establishment if they were exposed to insult! At those
words Gemma, who still sat in her place without stirring--her bosom was heaving
violently--Gemma raised her eyes to Herr Kluber and she gazed as intently,
with the same expression at him as at the officer. Emil was simply shaking
with rage.
"Get up, mein Frauein," Kluber admonished her with the same severity,
"it is not proper for you to remain here. We will go inside, in the tavern!"
Gemma rose in silence; he offered her his arm, she gave him hers, and he walked
into the tavern with a majestic step, which became, with his whole bearing,
more majestic and haughty the farther he got from the place where they had
dined. Poor Emil dragged himself after them.
But while Herr Kluber was settling up with the waiter, to whom, by way of
punishment, he gave not a single kreutzer for himself, Sanin with rapid steps
approached the table at which the officers were sitting, and addressing Gemma's
assailant, who was at that instant offering her rose to his companions in
turns to smell, he uttered very distinctly in French, "What you have
just done, sir, is conduct unworthy of an honest man, unworthy of the uniform
you wear, and I have come to tell you you are an ill-bred cur!" The young
man leaped on to his feet, but another officer, rather older, checked him
with a gesture, made him sit down, and turning to Sanin asked him also in
French, "Was he a relation, brother, or betrothed of the girl?"
"I am nothing to her at all," cried Sanin, "I am a Russian,
but I cannot look on at such insolence with indifference; but here is my card
and my address; monsieur l'officier can find me."
As he uttered these words, Sanin threw his visiting-card on the table, and
at the same moment hastily snatched Gemma's rose, which one of the officers
sitting at the table had dropped into his plate. The young man was again on
the point of jumping up from the table, but his companion again checked him,
saying, "Donhof, be quiet! Donhof, sit still." Then he got up himself,
and putting his hand to the peak of his cap, with a certain shade of respectfulness
in his voice and manner, told Sanin that to-morrow morning an officer of the
regiment would have the honour of calling upon him. Sanin replied with a short
bow, and hurriedly returned to his friends.
Herr Kluber pretended he had not noticed either Sanin's absence nor his interview
with the officers; he was urging on the coachman, who was putting in the horses,
and was furiously angry at his deliberateness. Gemma too said nothing to Sanin,
she did not even look at him; from her knitted brows, from her pale and compressed
lips, from her very immobility it could be seen that she was suffering inwardly.
Only Emil obviously wanted to speak to Sanin, wanted to question him; he had
seen Sanin go up to the officers, he had seen him give them something white--a
scrap of paper, a note, or a card. . . . The poor boy's heart was beating,
his cheeks burned, he was ready to throw himself on Sanin's neck, ready to
cry, or to go with him at once to crush all those accursed officers into dust
and ashes! He controlled himself, however, and did no more than watch intently
every movement of his noble Russian friend.
The coachman had at last harnessed the horses; the whole party seated themselves
in the carriage. Emil climbed on to the box, after Tartaglia; he was more
comfortable there, and had not Kluber, whom he could hardly bear the sight
of, sitting opposite to him.
The whole way home Herr Kluber discoursed . . . and he discoursed alone; no
one, absolutely no one, opposed him, nor did any one agree with him. He especially
insisted on the point that they had been wrong in not following his advice
when he suggested dining in a shut-up summer-house. There no unpleasantness
could have occurred! Then he expressed a few decided and even liberal sentiments
on the unpardonable way in which the government favoured the military, neglected
their discipline, and did not sufficiently consider the civilian element in
society (das burgerliche Element in der Societat!), and foretold that in time
this cause would give rise to discontent, which might well pass into revolution,
of which (here he dropped a sympathetic though severe sigh) France had given
them a sorrowful example! He added, however, that h e personally had the greatest
respect for authority, and never . . . no, never! . . . could be a revolutionist--but
he could not but express his disapprobation at the sight of such licence!
Then he made a few general observations on morality and immorality, good-breeding,
and the sense of dignity.
During all these lucubrations, Gemma, who even while they were walking before
dinner had not seemed quite pleased with Herr Kluber, and had therefore held
rather aloof from Sanin, and had been, as it were, embarrassed by his presence--Gemma
was unmistakably ashamed of her betrothed! Towards the end of the drive she
was positively wretched, and though, as before, she did not address a word
to Sanin, she suddenly flung an imploring glance at him. . . . He, for his
part, felt much more sorry for her than indignant with Herr Kluber; he was
even secretly, half-consciously, delighted at what had happened in the course
of that day, even though he had every reason to expect a challenge next morning.
This miserable partie de plaisir came to an end at last. As he helped Gemma
out of the carriage at the confectionery shop, Sanin without a word put into
her hand the rose he had recovered. She flushed crimson, pressed his hand,
and instantly hid the rose. He did not want to go into the house, though the
evening was only just beginning. She did not even invite him. Moreover Pantaleone,
who came out on the steps, announced that Frau Lenore was asleep. Emil took
a shy good-bye of Sanin; he felt as it were in awe of him; he greatly admired
him. Kluber saw Sanin to his lodging, and took leave of him stiffly. The well-regulated
German, for all his self-confidence, felt awkward. And indeed every one felt
awkward.
But in Sanin this feeling of awkwardness soon passed off. It was replaced
by a vague, but pleasant, even triumphant feeling. He walked up and down his
room, whistling, and not caring to think about anything, and was very well
pleased with himself.
Chapter XVII
"I WILL wait for the officer's visit till ten o'clock," he reflected
next morning, as he dressed, "and then let him come and look for me!"
But Germans rise early: it had not yet struck nine when the waiter informed
Sanin that the Herr Seconde Lieutenant von Richter wished to see him. Sanin
made haste to put on his coat, and told him to ask him up. Herr Richter turned
out, contrary to Sanin's expectation, to be a very young man, almost a boy.
He tried to give an expression of dignity to his beardless face, but did not
succeed at all: he could not even conceal his embarrassment, and as he sat
down on a chair, he tripped over his sword, and almost fell. Stammering and
hesitating, he announced to Sanin in bad French that he had come with a message
from his friend, Baron von Donhof; that this message was to demand from Herr
von Sanin an apology for the insulting expressions used by him on the previous
day; and in case of refusal on the part of Herr von Sanin, Baron von Donhof
would ask for satisfaction. Sanin replied that he did not mean to apologise,
but was ready to give him satisfaction. Then Herr von Richter, still with
the same hesitation, asked with whom, at what time and place, should he arrange
the necessary preliminaries. Sanin answered that he might come to him in two
hours' time, and that meanwhile, he, Sanin, would try and find a second. ("Who
the devil is there I can have for a second?" he was thinking to himself
meantime.) Herr von Richter got up and began to take leave . . . but at the
doorway he stopped, as though stung by a prick of conscience, and turning
to Sanin observed that his friend, Baron von Donhof; could not but recognise
. . . that he had been to a certain extent, to blame himself in the incident
of the previous day, and would, therefore, be satisfied with slight apologies
("des exghizes lecheres.") To this Sanin replied that he did not
intend to make any apology whatever, either slight or considerable, since
he did not consider himself to blame. "In that case," answered Herr
von Richter, blushing more than ever, "you will have to exchange friendly
shots--des goups de bisdolet a l'amiaple!"
"I don't understand that at all," observed Sanin; "are we to
fire in the air or what?"
"Oh, not exactly that," stammered the sub-lieutenant, utterly disconcerted,
"but I supposed since it is an affair between men of honour . . . I will
talk to your second," he broke off, and went away.
Sanin dropped into a chair directly he had gone, and stared at the floor. "What does it all mean? How is it my life has taken such a turn all of
a sudden? All the past, all the future has suddenly vanished, gone,--and all
that's left is that I am going to fight some one about something in Frankfort." He recalled a crazy aunt of his who used to dance and sing:
"O my lieutenant!
My little cucumber!
My little love!
Dance with me, my little dove!"
And he laughed and hummed as she used to: "O my lieutenant! Dance with
me, little dove!" "But I must act, though, I mustn't waste time," he cried aloud--jumped up and saw Pantaleone facing him with a note in his
hand.
"I knocked several times, but you did not answer; I thought you weren't
at home," said the old man, as he gave him the note. "From Signorina
Gemma."
Sanin took the note, mechanically, as they say, tore it open, and read it.
Gemma wrote to him that she was very anxious--about he knew what--and would
be very glad to see him at once.
"The Signorina is anxious," began Pantaleone, who obviously knew
what was in the note, "she told me to see what you are doing and to bring
you to her."
Sanin glanced at the old Italian, and pondered. A sudden idea flashed upon
his brain. For the first instant it struck him as too absurd to be possible.
"After all . . . why not?" he asked himself.
"M. Pantaleone!" he said aloud.
The old man started, tucked his chin into his cravat and stared at Sanin.
"Do you know," pursued Sanin, "what happened yesterday?"
Pantaleone chewed his lips and shook his immense top-knot of hair. "Yes."
(Emil had told him all about it directly he got home.)
"Oh, you know! Well, an officer has just this minute left me. That scoundrel
challenges me to a duel. I have accepted his challenge. But I have no second.
Will you be my second?"
Pantaleone started and raised his eyebrows so high that they were lost under
his overhanging hair.
"You are absolutely obliged to fight?" he said at last in Italian;
till that instant he had made use of French.
"Absolutely. I can't do otherwise--it would mean disgracing myself for
ever."
"H'm. If I don't consent to be your second you will find some one else."
"Yes . . . undoubtedly."
Pantaleone looked down. "But allow me to ask you, Signor de Tsanin, will
not your duel throw a slur on the reputation of a certain lady?"
"I don't suppose so; but in any case, there's no help for it."
"H'm!" Pantaleone retired altogether into his cravat. "Hey,
but that ferroflucto Kluberio--what's he about?" he cried all of a sudden,
looking up again.
"He? Nothing."
"Che!" Pantaleone shrugged his shoulders contemptuously. "I
have, in any case, to thank you," he articulated at last in an unsteady
voice "that even in my present humble condition you recognise that I
am a gentleman--un galant'uomo! In that way you have shown yourself to be
a real galant'uomo. But I must consider your proposal."
"There's no time to lose, dear Signor Ci . . . cippa . . ."
"Tola," the old man chimed in. "I ask only for one hour for
reflection. . . . The daughter of my benefactor is involved in this. . . .
And, therefore, I ought, I am bound, to reflect! . . . In an hour, in three-quarters
of an hour, you shall know my decision."
"Very well; I will wait."
"And now . . . what answer am I to give to Signorina Gemma?"
Sanin took a sheet of paper, wrote on it, "Set your mind at rest, dear
friend; in three hours' time I will come to you, and everything shall be explained.
I thank you from my heart for y our sympathy," and handed this sheet
to Pantaleone.
He put it carefully into his side-pocket, and once more repeating "In
an hour!" made towards the door; but turning sharply back, ran up to
Sanin, seized his hand, and pressing it to his shirt-front, cried, with his
eyes to the ceiling: "Noble youth! Great heart! (Nobil giovanotto! Gran
cuore!) permit a weak old man (a un vecchiotto!) to press your valorous right
hand (la vostra valorosa destra!)" Then he skipped back a pace or two,
threw up both hands, and went away.
Sanin looked after him . . . took up the newspaper and tried to read. But
his eyes wandered in vain over the lines: he understood nothing.
Chapter XVIII
AN hour later the waiter came in again to Sanin, and handed him an old, soiled
visiting-card, on which were the following words: "Pantaleone Cippatola
of Varese, court singer (cantante di camera) to his Royal Highness the Duke
of Modena"; and behind the waiter in walked Pantaleone himself. He had
changed his clothes from top to toe. He had on a black frock coat, reddish
with long wear, and a white pique waistcoat, upon which a pinch-beck chain
meandered playfully; a heavy cornelian seal hung low down on to his narrow
black trousers. In his right hand he carried a black beaver hat, in his left
two stout chamois gloves; he had tied his cravat in a taller and broader bow
than ever, and had stuck into his starched shirt-front a pin with a stone,
a so-called "cat's eye." On his forefinger was displayed a ring,
consisting of two clasped hands with a burning heart between them. A smell
of garments long laid by, a smell of camphor and of musk hung about the whole
person of the old man; the anxious solemnity of his deportment must have struck
the most casual spectator! Sanin rose to meet him.
"I am your second," Pantaleone announced in French, and he bowed
bending his whole body forward, and turning out his toes like a dancer. "I
have come for instructions. Do you want to fight to the death?"
"Why to the death, my dear Signor Cippatola? I will not for any consideration
take back my words--but I am not a bloodthirsty person! . . . But come, wait
a little, my opponent's second will be here directly. I will go into the next
room, and you can make arrangements with him. Believe me I shall never forget
your kindness, and I thank you from my heart."
"Honour before everything!" answered Pantaleone, and he sank into
an arm-chair, without waiting for Sanin to ask him to sit down. "If that
ferroflucto spitchebubbio," he said, passing from French into Italian,
"if that counter-jumper Kluber could not appreciate his obvious duty
or was afraid, so much the worse for him! . . . A cheap soul, and that's all
about it! . . . As for the conditions of the duel, I am your second, and your
interests are sacred to me! . . . When I lived in Padua there was a regiment
of the white dragoons stationed there, and I was very intimate with many of
the officers! . . . I was quite familiar with their whole code. And I used
often to converse on these subjects with your principe Tarbuski too. . . .
Is this second to come soon?"
"I am expecting him every minute--and here he comes," added Sanin,
looking into the street.
Pantaleone got up, looked at his watch, straightened his topknot of hair,
and hurriedly stuffed into his shoe an end of tape which was sticking out
below his trouser-leg, and the young sub-lieutenant came in, as red and embarrassed
as ever.
Sanin presented the seconds to each other. "M. Richter, sous-lieutenant,
M. Cippatola, artiste!" The sub-lieutenant was slightly disconcerted
by the old man's appearance . . . Oh, what would he have said had any one
whispered to him at that instant that the "artist" presented to
him was also employed in the culinary art! But Pantaleone assumed an air as
though taking part in the preliminaries of duels was for him the most everyday
affair: probably he was assisted at this juncture by the recollections of
his theatrical career, and he played the part of second simply as a part.
Both he and the sub-lieutenant were silent for a little.
"Well? Let us come to business!" Pantaleone spoke first, playing
with his cornelian seal.
"By all means," responded the sub-lieutenant, "but . . . the
presence of one of the principals . . ."
"I will leave you at once, gentlemen," cried Sanin, and with a bow
he went away into the bedroom and closed the door after him.
He flung himself on the bed and began thinking of Gemma . . . but the conversation
of the seconds reached him through the shut door. It was conducted in the
French language; both maltreated it mercilessly, each after his own fashion.
Pantaleone again alluded to the dragoons in Padua, and Principe Tarbuski;
the sub-lieutenant to "exghizes lecheres" and "goups de bistolet
a l'amiaple." But the old man would not even hear of any exghizes! To
Sanin's horror, he suddenly proceeded to talk of a certain young lady, an
innocent maiden, whose little finger was worth more than all the officers
in the world . . . (oune zeune damigella innoucenta, qu'a elle sola dans soun
peti doa vale piu que tout le zouffissie del mondo!), and repeated several
times with heat: "It's shameful! it's shameful!" (E ouna onta, ouna
onta!) The sub-lieutenant at first made him no reply, but presently an angry
quiver could be heard in the young man's voice, and he observed that he had
not come there to listen to sermonising.
"At your age it is always a good thing to hear the truth!" cried
Pantaleone.
The debate between the seconds several times became stormy; it lasted over
an hour, and was concluded at last on the following conditions: "Baron
von Donhof and M. de Sanin to meet the next day at ten o'clock in a small
wood near Hanau, at the distance of twenty paces; each to have the right to
fire twice at a signal given by the seconds. The pistols to be single-triggered
and not rifle-barrelled." Herr von Richter withdrew, and Pantaleone solemnly
opened the bedroom door, and after communicating the result of their deliberations,
cried again: "Bravo Russo! Bravo giovanotto! You will be victor!"
A few minutes later they both set off to the Rosellis' shop. Sanin, as a preliminary
measure, had exacted a promise from Pantaleone to keep the affair of the duel
a most profound secret. In reply, the old man had merely held up his finger,
and half closing his eyes, whispered twice over, Segredezza! He was obviously
in good spirits, and even walked with a freer step. All these unusual incidents,
unpleasant though they might be, carried him vividly back to the time when
he himself both received and gave challenges--only, it is true, on the stage.
Baritones, as we all know, have a great deal of strutting and fuming to do
in their parts.
Chapter XIX
EMIL ran out to meet Sanin--he had been watching for his arrival over an hour--and
hurriedly whispered into his ear that his mother knew nothing of the disagreeable
incident of the day before, that he must not even hint of it to her, and that
he was being sent to Kluber's shop again! . . . but that he wouldn't go there,
but would hide somewhere! communicating all this information in a few seconds,
he suddenly fell on Sanin's shoulder, kissed him impulsively, and rushed away
down the street. Gemma met Sanin in the shop; tried to say something and could
not. Her lips were trembling a little, while her eyes were half-closed and
turned away. He made haste to soothe her by the assurance that the whole affair
had ended . . . in utter nonsense.
"Has no one been to see you to-day?" she asked.
"A person did come to me and we had an explanation, and we . . . we came
to the most satisfactory conclusion."
Gemma went back behind the counter.
"She does not believe me!" he thought . . . he went into the next
room, however, and there found Frau Lenore.
Her sick headache had passed off but she was in a depressed state of mind.
She gave him a smile of welcome, but warned him at the same time that he would
be dull with her to-day, as she was not in a mood to entertain him. He sat
down beside her, and noticed that her eyelids were red and swollen.
"What is wrong, Frau Lenore? You've never been crying, surely?"
"Oh!" she whispered, nodding her head towards the room where her
daughter was. "Don't speak of it . . . aloud."
"But what have you been crying for?"
"Ah, M'sieu Sanin, I don't know myself what for!"
"No one has hurt your feelings?"
"Oh no! . . . I felt very low all of a sudden. I thought of Giovanni
Battista . . . of my youth . . . Then how quickly it had all passed away.
I have grown old, my friend, and I can't reconcile myself to that anyhow.
I feel I'm just the same as I was . . . but old age--it's here! it is here!"
Tears came into Frau Lenore's eyes. "You look at me, I see, and wonder
. . . But you will get old too, my friend, and will find out how bitter it
is!"
Sanin tried to comfort her, spoke of her children, in whom her own youth lived
again, even attempted to scoff at her a little, declaring that she was fishing
for compliments . . . but she quite seriously begged him to leave off, and
for the first time he realised that for such a sorrow, the despondency of
old age, there is no comfort or cure; one has to wait till it passes off of
itself. He proposed a game of tresette, and he could have thought of nothing
better. She agreed at once and seemed to get more cheerful.
Sanin played with her until dinner-time and after dinner Pantaleone too took
a hand in the game. Never had his topknot hung so low over his forehead, never
had his chin retreated so far into his cravat! Every movement was accompanied
by such intense solemnity that as one looked at him the thought involuntarily
arose, "What secret is that man guarding with such determination?" But segredezza! segredezza!
During the whole of that day he tried in every possible way to show the profoundest
respect for Sanin; at table, passing by the ladies, he solemnly and sedately
handed the dishes first to him; when they were at cards he intentionally gave
him the game; he announced, apropos of nothing at all, that the Russians were
the most great-hearted, brave, and resolute people in the world!
"Ah, you old flatterer!" Sanin thought to himself.
And he was not so much surprised at Signora Roselli's unexpected state of
mind, as at the way her daughter behaved to him. It was not that she avoided
him . . . on the contrary she sat continually a little distance from him,
listened to what he said, and looked at him; but she absolutely declined to
get into conversation with him, and directly he began talking to her, she
softly rose from her place, and went out for some instants. Then she came
in again, and again seated herself in some corner, and sat without stirring,
seeming meditative and perplexed . . . perplexed above all. Frau Lenore herself
noticed at last, that she was not as usual, and asked her twice what was the
matter.
"Nothing," answered Gemma; "you know I am sometimes like this."
"That is true," her mother assented.
So passed all that long day, neither gaily nor drearily--neither cheerfully
nor sadly. Had Gemma been different--Sanin . . . who knows? . . . might not
perhaps have been able to resist the temptation for a little display--or he
might simply have succumbed to melancholy at the possibility of a separation
for ever. . . . But as he did not once succeed in getting a word with Gemma,
he was obliged to confine himself to striking minor chords on the piano for
a quarter of an hour before evening coffee.
Emil came home late, and to avoid questions about Herr Kluber, beat a hasty
retreat. The time came for Sanin too to retire.
He began saying good-bye to Gemma. He recollected for some reason Lensky's
parting from Olga in Onegin. He pressed her hand warmly, and tried to get
a look at her face, but she turned a little away and released her fingers.
Chapter XX
IT was bright starlight when he came out on the steps. What multitudes of
stars, big and little, yellow, red, blue and white were scattered over the
sky! They seemed all flashing, swarming, twinkling unceasingly. There was
no moon in the sky, but without it every object could be clearly discerned
in the half-clear, shadowless twilight. Sanin walked down the street to the
end . . . He did not want to go home at once; he felt a desire to wander about
a little in the fresh air. He turned back and had hardly got on a level with
the house, where was the Rosellis' shop, when one of the windows looking out
on the street, suddenly creaked and opened; in its square of blackness--there
was no light in the room--appeared a woman's figure, and he heard his name--"Monsieur
Dimitri!"
He rushed at once up to the window . . . Gemma! She was leaning with her elbows
on the window-sill, bending forward.
"Monsieur Dimitri," she began in a cautious voice, "I have
been wanting all day long to give you something . . . but I could not make
up my mind to; and just now, seeing you, quite unexpectedly again, I thought
that it seems it is fated" . . .
Gemma was forced to stop at this word. She could not go on; something extraordinary
happened at that instant.
All of a sudden, in the midst of the profound stillness, over the perfectly
unclouded sky, there blew such a violent blast of wind, that the very earth
seemed shaking underfoot, the delicate starlight seemed quivering and trembling,
the air went round in a whirlwind. The wind, not cold, but hot, almost sultry,
smote against the trees, the roof of the house, its walls, and the street;
it instantaneously snatched off Sanin's hat, crumpled up and tangled Gemma's
curls. Sanin's head was on a level with the window-sill; he could not help
clinging close to it, and Gemma clutched hold of his shoulders with both hands,
and pressed her bosom against his head. The roar, the din, and the rattle
lasted about a minute. . . . Like a flock of huge birds the revelling whirlwind
darted revelling away. A profound stillness reigned once more.
Sanin raised his head and saw above him such an exquisite, scared, excited
face, such immense, large, magnificent eyes--it was such a beautiful creature
he saw, that his heart stood still within him, he pressed his lips to the
delicate tress of hair, that had fallen on his bosom, and could only murmur, "O Gemma!"
"What was that? Lightning?" she asked, her eyes wandering afar,
while she did not take her bare arms from his shoulder.
"Gemma!" repeated Sanin.
She sighed, looked around behind her into the room, and with a rapid movement
pulling the now faded rose out of her bodice, she threw it to Sanin.
"I wanted to give you this flower."
He recognised the rose, which he had won back the day before.
But already the window had slammed-to, and through the dark pane nothing could
be seen, no trace of white.
Sanin went home without his hat. . . . He did not even notice that he had
lost it.
Chapter XXI
IT was quite morning when he fell asleep. And no wonder! In the blast of that
instantaneous summer hurricane, he had almost as instantaneously felt, not
that Gemma was lovely, not that he liked her--that he had known before . .
. but that he almost . . . loved her! As suddenly as that blast of wind, had
love pounced down upon him. And then this senseless duel! He began to be tormented
by mournful forebodings. And even suppose they didn't kill him. . . . What
could come of his love for this girl, another man's betrothed? Even supposing
this "other man" was no danger, that Gemma herself would care for
him, or even cared for him already . . . What would come of it? How ask what!
Such a lovely creature! . . .
He walked about the room, sat down to the table, took a sheet of paper, traced
a few lines on it, and at once blotted them out. . . . He recalled Gemma's
wonderful figure in the dark window, in the starlight, set all a-fluttering
by the warm hurricane; he remembered her marble arms, like the arms of the
Olympian goddesses, felt their living weight on his shoulders. . . . Then
he took the rose she had thrown him, and it seemed to him that its half-withered
petals exhaled a fragrance of her, more delicate than the ordinary scent of
the rose.
"And would they kill him straight away or maim him?"
He did not go to bed, and fell asleep in his clothes on the sofa.
Some one slapped him on the shoulder. . . . He opened his eyes, and saw Pantaleone.
"He sleeps like Alexander of Macedon on the eve of the battle of Babylon!" cried the old man.
"What o'clock is it?" inquired Sanin.
"A quarter to seven; it's a two hours' drive to Hanau, and we must be
the first on the field. Russians are always beforehand with their enemies!
I have engaged the best carriage in Frankfort!"
Sanin began washing. "And where are the pistols?"
"That ferroflucto Tedesco will bring the pistols. He'll bring a doctor
too."
Pantaleone was obviously putting a good face on it as he had done the day
before; but when he was seated in the carriage with Sanin, when the coachman
had cracked his whip and the horses had started off at a gallop, a sudden
change came over the old singer and friend of Paduan dragoons. He began to
be confused and positively faint-hearted. Something seemed to have given way
in him, like a badly built wall.
"What are we doing, my God, Santissima Madonna!" he cried in an
unexpectedly high pipe, and he clutched at his head. "What am I about,
old fool, madman, frenetico?"
Sanin wondered and laughed, and putting his arm lightly round Pantaleone's
waist, he reminded him of the French proverb: "Le vin est tire--il faut
le boire."
"Yes, yes," answered the old man, "we will drain the cup together
to the dregs--but still I'm a madman! I'm a madman! All was going on so quietly,
so well . . . and all of a sudden: ta-ta-ta, tra-ta-ta!"
"Like the tutti in the orchestra," observed Sanin with a forced
smile. "But it's not your fault."
"I know it's not. I should think not indeed! And yet . . . such insolent
conduct! Diavolo, diavolo!" repeated Pantaleone, sighing and shaking
his topknot.
The carriage still rolled on and on.
It was an exquisite morning. The streets of Frankfort, which were just beginning
to show signs of life, looked so clean and snug; the windows of the houses
glittered in flashes like tinfoil; and as soon as the carriage had driven
beyond the city walls, from overhead, from a blue but not yet glaring sky,
the larks' loud trills showered down in floods. Suddenly at a turn in the
road, a familiar figure came from behind a tall poplar, took a few steps forward
and stood still. Sanin looked more closely. . . Heavens! it was Emil!
"But does he know anything about it?" he demanded of Pantaleone.
"I tell you I'm a madman," the poor Italian wailed despairingly,
almost in a shriek. "The wretched boy gave me no peace all night, and
this morning at last I revealed all to him!"
"So much for your segredezza!" thought Sanin. The carriage had got
up to Emil. Sanin told the coachman to stop the horses, and called the "wretched
boy" up to him. Emil approached with hesitating steps, pale as he had
been on the day he fainted. He could scarcely stand.
"What are you doing here?" Sanin asked him sternly. "Why aren't
you at home?"
"Let . . . let me come with you," faltered Emil in a trembling voice,
and he clasped his hands. His teeth were chattering as in a fever. "I
won't get in your way--only take me."
"If you feel the very slightest affection or respect for me," said
Sanin, "you will go at once home or to Herr Kluber's shop, and you won't
say one word to any one, and will wait for my return!"
"Your return," moaned Emil--and his voice quivered and broke, "but
if you're--"
"Emil!" Sanin interrupted--and he pointed to the coachman, "do
control yourself! Emil, please, go home! Listen to me, my dear! You say you
love me. Well, I beg you!" He held out his hand to him. Emil bent forward,
sobbed, pressed it to his lips, and darting away from the road, ran back towards
Frankfort across country.
"A noble heart too," muttered Pantaleone; but Sanin glanced severely
at him. . . . The old man shrank into the corner of the carriage. He was conscious
of his fault; and moreover, he felt more and more bewildered every instant;
could it really be he who was acting as second, who had got horses, and had
made all arrangements, and had left his peaceful abode at six o'clock? Besides,
his legs were stiff and aching.
Sanin thought it as well to cheer him up, and he chanced on the very thing,
he hit on the right word.
"Where is your old spirit, Signor Cippatola? Where is il antico valor?"
Signor Cippatola drew himself up and scowled "Il antico valor?"
he boomed in a bass voice. "Non e ancora spento (it's not all lost yet),
il antico valor!"
He put himself in a dignified attitude, began talking of his career, of the
opera, of the great tenor Garcia--and arrived at Hanau a hero.
After all, if you think of it, nothing is stronger in the world . . . and
weaker--than a word!
Chapter XXII
THE copse in which the duel was to take place was a quarter of a mile from
Hanau. Sanin and Pantaleone arrived there first, as the latter had predicted;
they gave orders for the carriage to remain outside the wood, and they plunged
into the shade of the rather thick and close-growing trees. They had to wait
about an hour.
The time of waiting did not seem particularly disagreeable to Sanin; he walked
up and down the path, listened to the birds singing, watched the dragonflies
in their flight, and like the majority of Russians in similar circumstances,
tried not to think. He only once dropped into reflection; he came across a
young lime-tree, broken down, in all probability by the squall of the previous
night. It was unmistakably dying . . . all the leaves on it were dead. "What
is it? an omen?" was the thought that flashed across his mind; but he
promptly began whistling, leaped over the very tree, and paced up and down
the path. As for Pantaleone, he was grumbling, abusing the Germans, sighing
and moaning, rubbing first his back and then his knees. He even yawned from
agitation, which gave a very comic expression to his tiny shrivelled-up face.
Sanin could scarcely help laughing when he looked at him.
They heard, at last, the rolling of wheels along the soft road. "It's
they!" said Pantaleone, and he was on the alert and drew himself up,
not without a momentary nervous shiver, which he made haste, however, to cover
with the ejaculation "B-r-r!" and the remark that the morning was
rather fresh. A heavy dew drenched the grass and leaves, but the sultry heat
penetrated even into the wood.
Both the officers quickly made their appearance under its arched avenues;
they were accompanied by a little thick-set man, with a phlegmatic, almost
sleepy, expression of face--the army doctor. He carried in one hand an earthenware
pitcher of water--to be ready for any emergency; a satchel with surgical instruments
and bandages hung on his left shoulder. It was obvious that he was thoroughly
used to such excursions; they constituted one of the sources of his income;
each duel yielded him eight gold crowns--four from each of the combatants.
Herr von Richter carried a case of pistols, Herr von Donhof- probably considering
it the thing--was swinging in his hand a little cane.
"Pantaleone!" Sanin whispered to the old man; if . . . if I'm killed--anything
may happen--take out of my side pocket a paper--there's a flower wrapped up
in it--and give the paper to Signorina Gemma. Do you hear? You promise?"
The old man looked dejectedly at him, and nodded his head affirmatively. .
. But God knows whether he understood what Sanin was asking him to do.
The combatants and the seconds exchanged the customary bows; the doctor alone
did not move as much as an eyelash; he sat down yawning on the grass, as much
as to say, "I'm not here for expressions of chivalrous courtesy."
Herr von Richter proposed to Herr "Tshibadola" that he should select
the place; Herr "Tshibadola" responded, moving his tongue with difficulty--"the
wall" within him had completely given way again. "You act, my dear
sir; I will watch. . . ."
And Herr von Richter proceeded to act. He picked out in the wood close by
a very pretty clearing all studded with flowers; he measured out the steps,
and marked the two extreme points with sticks, which he cut and pointed. He
took the pistols out of the case, and squatting on his heels, he rammed in
the bullets; in short, he fussed about and exerted himself to the utmost,
continually mopping his perspiring brow with a white handkerchief. Pantaleone,
who accompanied him, was more like a man frozen. During all these preparations,
the two principals stood at a little distance, looking like two schoolboys
who have been punished, and are sulky with their tutors.
The decisive moment arrived. . . . "Each took his pistol. . . ."
But at this point Herr von Richter observed to Pantaleone that it was his
duty, as the senior second, according to the rules of the duel, to address
a final word of advice and exhortation to be reconciled to the combatants,
before uttering the fatal "one! two! three!"; that although this
exhortation had no effect of any sort and was, as a rule, nothing but an empty
formality, still, by the performance of this formality, Herr Cippatola would
be rid of a certain share of responsibility; that, properly speaking, such
an admonition formed the direct duty of the so-called "impartial witness"
(unpartheiischer Zeuge), but since they had no such person present, he, Herr
von Richter, would readily yield this privilege to his honoured colleague.
Pantaleone, who had already succeeded in obliterating himself behind a bush,
so as not to see the offending officer at all, at first made out nothing at
all of Herr von Richter's speech, especially, as it had been delivered through
the nose, but all of a sudden he started, stepped hurriedly forward, and convulsively
thumping at his chest, in a hoarse voice wailed out in his mixed jargon: "A
la la la . . . Che bestialita! Deux zeun ommes comme ca que si battono--perche?
Che diavolo? Andata a casa!"
"I will not consent to a reconciliation," Sanin intervened hurriedly.
"And I too will not," his opponent repeated after him.
"Well, then shout one, two, three!" von Richter said, addressing
the distracted Pantaleone.
The latter promptly ducked behind the bush again, and from there, all huddled
together, his eyes screwed up, and his head turned away, he shouted at the
top of his voice: "Una . . . due . . . tre!"
The first shot was Sanin's, and he missed. His bullet went ping against a
tree. Baron von Donhof shot directly after him--intentionally, to one side,
into the air.
A constrained silence followed . . . . No one moved. Pantaleone uttered a
faint moan.
"Is it your wish to go on?" said Donhof.
"Why did you shoot in the air?" inquired Sanin.
"That's nothing to do with you."
"Will you shoot in the air the second time?" Sanin asked again.
"Possibly: I don't know."
"Excuse me, excuse me, gentlemen . . ." began von Richter; "duellists
have not the right to talk together. That's out of order."
"I decline my shot," said Sanin, and he threw his pistol on the
ground.
"And I too do not intend to go on with the duel," cried Donhof;
and he too threw his pistol on the ground. "And more than that, I am
prepared to own that I was in the wrong--the day before yesterday."
He moved uneasily, and hesitatingly held out his hand. Sanin went rapidly
up to him and shook it. Both the young men looked at each other with a smile,
and both their faces flushed crimson.
"Bravi! bravi!" Pantaleone roared suddenly as if he had gone mad,
and clapping his hands, he rushed like a whirlwind from behind the bush; while
the doctor, who had been sitting on one side on a felled tree, promptly rose,
poured the water out of the jug and walked off with a lazy, rolling step out
of the wood.
"Honour is satisfied, and the duel is over!" von Richter announced.
"Fuori!" Pantaleone boomed once more, through old associations.
When he had exchanged bows with the officers, and taken his seat in the carriage,
Sanin certainly felt all over him, if not a sense of pleasure, at least a
certain lightness of heart, as after an operation is over; but there was another
feeling astir within him too, a feeling akin to shame. . . . The duel, in
which he had just played his part, struck him as something false, a got-up
formality, a common officers' and students' farce. He recalled the phlegmatic
doctor, he recalled how he had grinned, that is, wrinkled up his nose, when
he saw him coming out of the wood almost arm-in-arm with Baron Donhof. And
afterwards when Pantaleone had paid him the four crowns due to him . . . Ah!
there was something nasty about it!
Yes, Sanin was a little conscience-smitten and ashamed . . . though, on the
other hand, what was there for him to have done? Could he have left the young
officer's insolence unrebuked? could he have behaved like Herr Kluber? He
had stood up for Gemma, he had championed her . . . that was so; and yet,
there was an uneasy pang in his heart, and he was conscience-smitten, and
even ashamed.
Not so Pantaleone--he was simply in his glory! He was suddenly possessed by
a feeling of pride. A victorious general, returning from the field of battle
he has won, could not have looked about him with greater self-satisfaction.
Sanin's demeanour during the duel filled him with enthusiasm. He called him
a hero, and would not listen to his exhortations and even his entreaties.
He compared him to a monument of marble or of bronze, with the statue of the
commander in Don Juan! For himself he admitted he had been conscious of some
perturbation of mind, "but, of course, I am an artist," he observed;
"I have a highly-strung nature, while you are the son of the snows and
the granite rocks."
Sanin was positively at a loss how to quiet the jubilant artist.
Almost at the same place in the road where two hours before they had come
upon Emil, he again jumped out from behind a tree, and, with a cry of joy
upon his lips, waving his cap and leaping into the air, he rushed straight
at the carriage, almost fell under the wheel, and, without waiting for the
horses to stop, clambered up over the carriage-door and fairly clung to Sanin.
"You are alive, you are not wounded!" he kept repeating. "Forgive
me, I did not obey you, I did not go back to Frankfort . . . I could not!
I waited for you here . . . Tell me how was it? You . . . killed him?"
Sanin with some difficulty pacified Emil and made him sit down.
With great verbosity, with evident pleasure, Pantaleone communicated to him
all the details of the duel, and, of course, did not omit to refer again to
the monument of bronze and the statue of the commander. He even rose from
his seat and, standing with his feet wide apart to preserve his equilibrium,
folding his arm on his chest and looking contemptuously over his shoulder,
gave an ocular representation of the commander--Sanin! Emil listened with
awe, occasionally interrupting the narrative with an exclamation, or swiftly
getting up and as swiftly kissing his heroic friend.
The carriage wheels rumbled over the paved roads of Frankfort, and stopped
at last before the hotel where Sanin was living.
Escorted by his two companions, he went up the stairs, when suddenly a woman
came with hurried steps out of the dark corridor; her face was hidden by a
veil, she stood still, facing Sanin, wavered a little, gave a trembling sigh,
at once ran down into the street and vanished, to the great astonishment of
the waiter, who explained that "that lady had been for over an hour waiting
for the return of the foreign gentleman." Momentary as was the apparition,
Sanin recognised Gemma. He recognised her eyes under the thick silk of her
brown veil.
"Did Fraulein Gemma know, then?" . . . he said slowly in a displeased
voice in German, addressing Emil and Pantaleone, who were following close
on his heels.
Emil blushed and was confused.
"I was obliged to. tell her all," he faltered; "she guessed,
and I could not help it. . . . But now that's of no consequence," he
hurried to add eagerly, "everything has ended so splendidly, and she
has seen you well and uninjured!"
Sanin turned away.
"What a couple of chatterboxes you are!" he observed in a tone of
annoyance, as he went into his room and sat down on a chair.
"Don't be angry, please," Emil implored.
"Very well, I won't be angry "--(Sanin was not, in fact, angry--and,
after all, he could hardly have desired that Gemma should know nothing about
it). "Very well . . . that's enough embracing. You get along now. I want
to be alone. I'm going to sleep. I'm tired."
"An excellent idea!" cried Pantaleone. "You need repose! You
have fully earned it, noble signor! Come along, Emilio! On tip-toe! On tip-toe!
Sh--sh--sh!"
When he said he wanted to go to sleep, Sanin had simply wished to get rid
of his companions; but when he was left alone, he was really aware of considerable
weariness in all his limbs; he had hardly closed his eyes all the preceding
night, and throwing himself on his bed he fell immediately into a sound sleep.
Chapter XXIII
HE slept for some hours without waking. Then he began to dream that he was
once more fighting a duel, that the antagonist standing facing him was Herr
Kluber, and on a fir-tree was sitting a parrot, and this parrot was Pantaleone,
and he kept tapping with his beak: one, one, one!
"One . . . one . . . one!" he heard the tapping too distinctly;
he opened his eyes, raised his head . . . some one was knocking at his door.
"Come in!" called Sanin.
The waiter came in and answered that a lady very particularly wished to see
him.
"Gemma!" flashed into his head . . . but the lady turned out to
be her mother, Frau Lenore.
Directly she came in, she dropped at once into a chair and began to cry.
"What is the matter, my dear, good Madame Roselli?" began Sanin,
sitting beside her and softly touching her hand. "What has happened?
calm yourself, I entreat you."
"Ah, Herr Dimitri, I am very . . . very miserable!"
"You are miserable?"
"Ah, very! Could I have foreseen such a thing? All of a sudden, like
thunder from a clear sky . . ."
She caught her breath.
"But what is it? Explain! Would you like a glass of water?"
"No, thank you." Frau Lenore wiped her eyes with her handkerchief
and began to cry with renewed energy. "I know all, you see! All!"
"All? that is to say?"
"Everything that took place to-day! And the cause . . . I know that too!
You acted like an honourable man; but what an unfortunate combination of circumstances!
I was quite right in not liking that excursion to Soden . . . quite right!"
(Frau Lenore had said nothing of the sort on the day of the excursion, but
she was convinced now that she had foreseen "all" even then.) "I
have come to you as to an honourable man, as to a friend, though I only saw
you for the first time five days ago. . . . But you know I am a widow, a lonely
woman. . . . My daughter . . ."
Tears choked Frau Lenore's voice. Sanin did not know what to think. "Your
daughter?" he repeated.
"My daughter, Gemma," broke almost with a groan from Frau Lenore,
behind the tear-soaked handkerchief, "informed me to-day that she would
not marry Herr Kluber, and that I must refuse him!"
Sanin positively started back a little; he had not expected that.
"I won't say anything now," Frau Lenore went on, "of the disgrace
of it, of its being something unheard of in the world for a girl to jilt her
betrothed; but you see it's ruin for us, Herr Dimitri!" Frau Lenore slowly
and carefully twisted up her handkerchief in a tiny, tiny little ball, as
though she would enclose all her grief within it. "We can't go on living
on the takings of our shop, Herr Dimitri! and Herr Kluber is very rich, and
will be richer still. And what is he to be refused for? Because he did not
defend his betrothed? Allowing that was not very handsome on his part, still,
he's a civilian, has not had a university education, and as a solid business
man, it was for him to look with contempt on the frivolous prank of some unknown
little officer. And what sort of insult was it, after all, Herr Dimitri?"
"Excuse me, Frau Lenore, you seem to be blaming me."
"I am not blaming you in the least, not in the least! You're quite another
matter; you are, like all Russians, a military man . . ."
"Excuse me, I'm not at all . . ."
"You're a foreigner, a visitor, and I'm grateful to you," Frau Lenore
went on, not heeding Sanin. She sighed, waved her hands, unwound her handkerchief
again, and blew her nose. Simply from the way in which her distress expressed
itself, it could be seen that she had not been born under a northern sky.
"And how is Herr Kluber to look after his shop, if he is to fight with
his customers? It's utterly inconsistent! And now I am to send him away! But
what are we going to live on? At one time we were the only people that made
angel cakes, and nougat of pistachio nuts, and we had plenty of customers;
but now all the shops make angel cakes! Only consider; even without this,
they'll talk in the town about your duel . . . it's impossible to keep it
secret. And all of a sudden, the marriage broken off! It will be a scandal,
a scandal! Gemma is a splendid girl, she loves me; but she's an obstinate
republican, she doesn't care for the opinion of others. You're the only person
that can persuade her!"
Sanin was more amazed than ever. "I, Frau Lenore?"
"Yes, you alone . . . you alone. That's why I have come to you; I could
not think of anything else to do! You are so clever, so good! You have fought
in her defence. She will trust you! She is bound to trust you--why, you have
risked your life on her account! You will make her understand, for I can do
nothing more; you make her understand that she will bring ruin on herself
and all of us. You saved my son--save my daughter too! God Himself sent you
here . . . I am ready on my knees to beseech you. . . ." And Frau Lenore
half rose from her seat as though about to fall at Sanin's feet. . . . He
restrained her.
"Frau Lenore! For mercy's sake! What are you doing?"
She clutched his hand impulsively. "You promise . . ."
"Frau Lenore, think a moment; what right have I . . ."
"You promise? You don't want me to die here at once before your eyes?"
Sanin was utterly nonplussed. It was the first time in his life he had had
to deal with any one of ardent Italian blood.
"I will do whatever you like," he cried. "I will talk to Fraulein
Gemma. . . ."
Frau Lenore uttered a cry of delight.
"Only I really can't say what result will come of it . . ."
"Ah, don't go back, don't go back from your words!" cried Frau Lenore
in an imploring voice; "you have already consented! The result is certain
to be excellent. Any way, I can do nothing more! She won't listen to me!"
"Has she so positively stated her disinclination to marry Herr Kluber?" Sanin inquired after a short silence.
"As if she'd cut the knot with a knife! She's her father all over, Giovanni
Battista! Wilful girl!"
"Wilful? Is she!" . . . Sanin said slowly.
"Yes . . . yes . . . but she's an angel too. She will mind you. Are you
coming soon? Oh, my dear Russian friend!" Frau Lenore rose impulsively
from her chair, and as impulsively clasped the head of Sanin, who was sitting
opposite her. "Accept a mother's blessing--and give me some water!"
Sanin brought Signora Roselli a glass of water, gave her his word of honour
that he would come directly, escorted her down the stairs to the street, and
when he was back in his own room, positively threw up his arms and opened
his eyes wide in his amazement.
"Well," he thought, "well, now life is going round in a whirl!
And it's whirling so that I'm giddy." He did not attempt to look within,
to realise what was going on in himself: it was all uproar and confusion,
and that was all he knew! What a day it had been! His lips murmured unconsciously:
"Wilful . . . her mother says . . . and I have got to advise her . .
. her! And advise her what?"
Sanin, really, was giddy, and above all this whirl of shifting sensations
and impressions and unfinished thoughts, there floated continually the image
of Gemma, the image so ineffaceably impressed on his memory on that hot night,
quivering with electricity, in that dark window, in the light of the swarming
stars!
Chapter XXIV
WITH hesitating footsteps Sanin approached the house of Signora Roselli. His
heart was beating violently; he distinctly felt, and even heard it thumping
at his side. What should he say to Gemma, how should he begin? He went into
the house, not through the shop, but by the back entrance. In the little outer
room he met Frau Lenore. She was both relieved and scared at the sight of
him.
"I have been expecting you," she said in a whisper, squeezing his
hand with each of hers in turn. "Go into the garden; she is there. Mind,
I rely on you!"
Sanin went into the garden.
Gemma was sitting on a garden-seat near the path, she was sorting a big basket
full of cherries, picking out the ripest, and putting them on a dish. The
sun was low--it was seven o'clock in the evening--and there was more purple
than gold in the full slanting light with which it flooded the whole of Signora
Roselli's little garden. From time to time faintly audibly, and as it were
deliberately, the leaves rustled, and belated bees buzzed abruptly as they
flew from one flower to the next, and somewhere a dove was cooing a never-changing,
unceasing note. Gemma had on the same round hat in which she had driven to
Soden. She peeped at Sanin from under its turned-down brim, and again bent
over the basket.
Sanin went up to Gemma, unconsciously making each step shorter, and . . .
and . . . and nothing better could he find to say to her than to ask why was
she sorting the cherries.
Gemma was in no haste to reply.
"These are riper," she observed at last, "they will go into
jam, and those are for tarts. You know the round sweet tarts we sell?"
As she said those words, Gemma bent her head still lower, and her right hand
with two cherries in her fingers was suspended in the air between the basket
and the dish.
"May I sit by you?" asked Sanin.
"Yes." Gemma moved a little along on the seat. Sanin placed himself
beside her. "How am I to begin?" was his thought. But Gemma got
him out of his difficulty.
"You have fought a duel to-day," she began eagerly, and she turned
all her lovely, bashfully flushing face to him--and what depths of gratitude
were shining in those eyes! "And you are so calm! I suppose for you danger
does not exist?"
"Oh, come! I have not been exposed to any danger. Everything went off
very satisfactorily and inoffensively."
Gemma passed her finger to right and to left before her eyes. . . Also an
Italian gesture. "No! no! don't say that! You won't deceive me! Pantaleone
has told me everything!"
"He's a trustworthy witness! Did he compare me to the statue of the commander?"
"His expressions may be ridiculous, but his feeling is not ridiculous,
nor is what you have done to-day. And all that on my account . . . for me
. . . I shall never forget it."
"I assure you, Fraulein Gemma . . ."
"I shall never forget it," she said deliberately; once more she
looked intently at him, and turned away.
He could now see her delicate pure profile, and it seemed to him that he had
never seen anything like it, and had never known anything like what he was
feeling at that instant. His soul was on fire.
"And my promise!" flashed in among his thoughts.
"Fraulein Gemma . . ." he began after a momentary hesitation.
"What?"
She did not turn to him, she went on sorting the cherries, carefully taking
them by their stalks with her finger-tips, assiduously picking out the leaves.
. . . But what a confiding caress could be heard in that one word, "What?"
"Has your mother said nothing to you . . . about . . ."
"About?"
"About me?"
Gemma suddenly flung back into the basket the cherries she had taken.
"Has she been talking to you?" she asked in her turn.
"Yes."
"What has she been saying to you?"
"She told me that you . . . that you have suddenly decided to change
. . . your former intention." Gemma's head was bent again. She vanished
altogether under her hat; nothing could be seen but her neck, supple and tender,
as the stalk of a big flower.
"What intentions?"
"Your intentions . . . relative to . . . the future arrangement of your
life."
"That is . . . you are speaking . . . of Herr Kluber?"
"Yes."
"Mamma told you I don't want to be Herr Kluber's wife?"
"Yes."
Gemma moved forward on the seat. The basket tottered, fell . . . a few cherries
rolled on to the path. A minute passed by. . . another.
"Why did she tell you so?" he heard her voice saying. Sanin as before
could only see Gemma's neck. Her bosom rose and fell more rapidly than before.
"Why? Your mother thought that as you and I, in a short time, have become,
so to say, friends, and you have some confidence in me I am in a position
to give you good advice--and you would mind what I say."
Gemma's hands slowly slid on to her knees. She began plucking at the folds
of her dress.
"What advice will you give me, Monsieur Dimitri?" she asked, after
a short pause.
Sanin saw that Gemma's fingers were trembling on her knees. . . . She was
only plucking at the folds of her dress to hide their trembling. He softly
laid his hand on those pale, shaking fingers.
"Gemma," he said, "why don't you look at me?" She instantly
tossed her hat back on to her shoulder, and bent her eyes upon him, confiding
and grateful as before. She waited for him to speak. . . . But the sight of
her face had bewildered, and, as it were, dazed him. The warm glow of the
evening sun lighted up her youthful head, and the expression of that head
was brighter, more radiant than its glow.
"I will mind what you say, Monsieur Dimitri," she said, faintly
smiling, and faintly arching her brows; "but what advice do you give
me?"
"What advice?" repeated Sanin. "Well, you see, your mother
considers that to dismiss Herr Kluber simply because he did not show any special
courage the day before yesterday . . ."
"Simply because?" said Gemma. She bent down, picked up the basket,
and set it beside her on the garden seat.
"That . . . altogether . . . to dismiss him, would be, on your part .
. . unreasonable; that it is a step, all the consequences of which ought to
be thoroughly weighed; that in fact the very position of your affairs imposes
certain obligations on every member of your family . . ."
"All that is mamma's opinion," Gemma interposed; "those are
her words; but what is your opinion?"
"Mine?" Sanin was silent for a while. He felt a lump rising in his
throat and catching at his breath. "I too consider," he began with
an effort . . .
Gemma drew herself up. "Too? You too?"
"Yes . . . that is . . ." Sanin was unable, positively unable to
add a single word more.
"Very well," said Gemma. "If you, as a friend, advise me to
change my decision--that is, not to change my former decision--I will think
it over." Not knowing what she was doing, she began to tip the cherries
back from the plate into the basket. . . . "Mamma hopes that I will mind
what you say. Well . . . perhaps I really will mind what you say."
"But excuse me, Fraulein Gemma, I should like first to know what reason
impelled you . . ."
"I will mind what you say," Gemma repeated, her face right up to
her brows was working, her cheeks were white, she was biting her lower lip.
"You have done so much for me, that I am bound to do as you wish; bound
to carry out your wishes. I will tell mamma . . . I will think again. Here
she is, by the way, coming here."
Frau Lenore did in fact appear in the doorway leading from the house to the
garden. She was in an agony of impatience; she could not keep still. According
to her calculations, Sanin must long ago have finished all he had to say to
Gemma, though his conversation with her had not lasted a quarter of an hour.
"No, no, no, for God's sake, don't tell her anything yet," Sanin
articulated hurriedly, almost in alarm. "Wait a little . . . I will tell
you, I will write to you . . . and till then don't decide on anything . .
. wait!"
He pressed Gemma's hand, jumped up from the seat, and to Frau Lenore's great
amazement, rushed past her, and raising his hat, muttered something unintelligible--and
vanished.
She went up to her daughter.
"Tell me, please, Gemma . . ."
The latter suddenly got up and hugged her. . . . "Dear mamma, can you
wait a little, a tiny bit . . . till to-morrow? Can you? And till to-morrow
not a word? . . . Ah! . . ."
She burst into sudden happy tears, incomprehensible to herself. This surprised
Frau Lenore, the more as the expression of Gemma's face was far from sorrowful,--rather
joyful in fact.
"What is it?" she asked. "You never cry and here, all at once
. . ."
"Nothing, mamma, never mind! you only wait. We must both wait a little.
Don't ask me anything till to-morrow--and let us sort the cherries before
the sun has set."
"But you will be reasonable?"
"Oh, I'm very reasonable!" Gemma shook her head significantly. She
began to make up little bunches of cherries, holding them high above her flushed
face. She did not wipe away her tears; they had dried of themselves.
Chapter XXV
ALMOST running, Sanin returned to his hotel room. He felt, he knew that only
there, only by himself, would it be clear to him at last what was the matter,
what was happening to him. And so it was; directly he had got inside his room,
directly he had sat down to the writing-table, with both elbows on the table
and both hands pressed to his face, he cried in a sad and choked voice, "I
love her, love her madly!" and he was all aglow within, like a fire when
a thick layer of dead ash has been suddenly blown off. An instant more . .
. and he was utterly unable to understand how he could have sat beside her
. . . her!--and talked to her and not have felt that he worshipped the very
hem of her garment, that he was ready as young people express it "to
die at her feet." The last interview in the garden had decided everything.
Now when he thought of her, she did not appear to him with blazing curls in
the shining starlight; he saw her sitting on the garden-seat, saw her all
at once tossing back her hat, and gazing at him so confidingly . . . and the
tremor and hunger of love ran through all his veins. He remembered the rose
which he had been carrying about in his pocket for three days: he snatched
it out, and pressed it with such feverish violence to his lips, that he could
not help frowning with the pain. Now he considered nothing, reflected on nothing,
did not deliberate, and did not look forward; he had done with all his past,
he leaped forward into the future; from the dreary bank of his lonely bachelor
life he plunged headlong into that glad, seething, mighty torrent--and little
he cared, little he wished to know, where it would carry him, or whether it
would dash him against a rock! No more the soft-flowing currents of the Uhland
song, which had lulled him not long ago. . . . These were mighty, irresistible
torrents! They rush flying onwards--and he flies with them. . . .
He took a sheet of paper, and without blotting out a word, almost with one
sweep of the pen, wrote as follows:--
"Dear Gemma,-- You know what advice I undertook to give you, what your
mother desired, and what she asked of me; but what you don't know and what
I must tell you now is, that I love you, love you with all the ardour of a
heart that loves for the first time! This passion has flamed up in me suddenly,
but with such force that I can find no words for it! When your mother came
to me and asked me, it was still only smouldering in me, or else I should
certainly, as an honest man, have refused to carry out her request. . . .
The confession I make you now is the confession of an honest man. You ought
to know whom you have to do with--between us there should exist no misunderstandings.
You see that I cannot give you any advice. . . . I love you, love you, love
you--and I have nothing else--either in my head or in my heart!!
"DM. Sanin."
When he had folded and sealed this note, Sanin was on the point of ringing
for the waiter and sending it by him . . . "No!" he thought, "it
would be awkward. . . . By Emil? But to go to the shop, and seek him out there
among the other employes, would be awkward too. Besides, it's dark by now,
and he has probably left the shop." Reflecting after this fashion, Sanin
put on his hat, however, and went into the street; he turned a corner, another,
and to his unspeakable delight, saw Emil before him. With a satchel under
his arm, and a roll of papers in his hand, the young enthusiast was hurrying
home.
"They may well say every lover has a lucky star," thought Sanin,
and he called to Emil.
The latter turned and at once rushed to him.
Sanin cut short his transports, handed him the note, and explained to whom
and how he was to deliver it. . . . Emil listened attentively.
"So that no one sees?" he inquired, assuming an important and mysterious
air, that said, "We understand the inner meaning of it all!"
"Yes, my friend," said Sanin and he was a little disconcerted; however,
he patted Emil on the cheek. . . . "And if there should be an answer.
. . . You will bring me the answer, won't you? I will stay at home."
"Don't worry yourself about that!" Emil whispered gaily; he ran
off and as he ran nodded once more to him.
Sanin went back home, and without lighting a candle, flung himself on the
sofa, put his hands behind his head, and abandoned himself to those sensations
of newly conscious love, which it is no good even to describe. One who has
felt them knows their languor and sweetness; to one who has felt them not,
one could never make them known.
The door opened--Emil's head appeared.
"I have brought it," he said in a whisper: "here it is--the
answer!"
He showed and waved above his head a folded sheet of paper.
Sanin leaped up from the sofa and snatched it out of Emil's hand. Passion
was working too powerfully within him: he had no thought of reserve now, nor
of the observance of a suitable demeanour--even before this boy, her brother.
He would have been scrupulous, he would have controlled himself--if he could!
He went to the window, and by the light of a street lamp which stood just
opposite the house, he read the following lines:--
"I beg you, I beseech you--don't come to see us, don't show yourself
all day to-morrow. It's necessary, absolutely necessary for me, and then everything
shall be settled. I know you will not say no, because . . .
"Gemma."
Sanin read this note twice through. Oh, how touchingly sweet and beautiful
her handwriting seemed to him! He thought a little, and turning to Emil, who,
wishing to give him to understand what a discreet young person he was, was
standing with his face to the wall, and scratching on it with his finger-nails,
he called him aloud by name.
Emil ran at once to Sanin. "What do you want me to do?"
"Listen, my young friend . . ."
"Monsieur Dimitri," Emil interrupted in a plaintive voice, "why
do you address me so formally?"
Sanin laughed. "Oh, very well. Listen, my dearest boy--(Emil gave a little
skip of delight)--listen; there you understand, there, you will say, that
everything shall be done exactly as is wished--(Emil compressed his lips and
nodded solemnly)--and as for me . . . what are you doing to-morrow, my dear
boy?"
"I? what am I doing? What would you like me to do?"
"If you can, come to me early in the morning--and we will walk about
the country round Frankfort till evening. . . Would you like to?"
Emil gave another little skip. "I say, what in the world could be jollier?
Go a walk with you--why, it's simply glorious! I'll be sure to come!"
"And if they won't let you?"
"They will let me!"
"Listen . . . Don't say there that I asked you to come for the whole
day."
"Why should I? But I'll get away all the same! What does it matter?"
Emil warmly kissed Sanin, and ran away.
Sanin walked up and down the room a long while, and went late to bed. He gave
himself up to the same delicate and sweet sensations, the same joyous thrill
at facing a new life. Sanin was very glad that the idea had occurred to him
to invite Emil to spend the next day with him; he was like his sister. "He
will recall her," was his thought.
But most of all, he marvelled how he could have been yesterday other than
he was to-day. It seemed to him that he had loved Gemma for all time; and
that he had loved her just as he loved her to-day.
Chapter XXVI
AT eight o'clock next morning, Emil arrived at Sanin's hotel leading Tartaglia
by a string. Had he sprung of German parentage, he could not have shown greater
practicality. He had told a lie at home; he had said he was going for a walk
with Sanin till lunch-time, and then going to the shop. While Sanin was dressing,
Emil began to talk to him, rather hesitatingly, it is true, about Gemma, about
her rupture with Herr Kluber; but Sanin preserved an austere silence in reply,
and Emil, looking as though he understood why so serious a matter should not
be touched on lightly, did not return to the subject, and only assumed from
time to time an intense and even severe expression.
After drinking coffee, the two friends set off together--on foot, of course--to
Hausen, a little village lying a short distance from Frankfort, and surrounded
by woods. The whole chain of the Taunus mountains could be seen clearly from
there. The weather was lovely; the sunshine was bright and warm, but not blazing
hot; a fresh wind rustled briskly among the green leaves; the shadows of high,
round clouds glided swiftly and smoothly in small patches over the earth.
The two young people soon got out of the town, and stepped out boldly and
gaily along the well-kept road. They reached the woods, and wandered about
there a long time; then they lunched very heartily at a country inn; then
climbed on to the mountains, admired the views, rolled stones down and clapped
their hands, watching the queer droll way in which the stones hopped along
like rabbits, till a man passing below, unseen by them, began abusing them
in a loud ringing voice. Then they lay full length on the short dry moss of
yellowish-violet colour; then they drank beer at another inn; ran races, and
tried for a wager which could jump farthest. They discovered an echo, and
began to call to it; sang songs, hallooed, wrestled, broke up dry twigs, decked
their hats with fern, and even danced. Tartaglia, as far as he could, shared
in all these pastimes; he did not throw stones, it is true, but he rolled
head over heels after them; he howled when they were singing, and even drank
beer, though with evident aversion; he had been trained in this art by a student
to whom he had once belonged. But he was not prompt in obeying Emil--not as
he was with his master Pantaleone--and when Emil ordered him to "speak,"
or to "sneeze," he only wagged his tail and thrust out his tongue
like a pipe.
The young people talked, too. At the beginning of the walk, Sanin, as the
elder, and so more reflective, turned the conversation on fate and predestination,
and the nature and meaning of man's destiny; but the conversation quickly
took a less serious turn. Emil began to question his friend and patron about
Russia, how duels were fought there, and whether the women there were beautiful,
and whether one could learn Russian quickly, and what he had felt when the
officer took aim at him. Sanin, on his side, questioned Emil about his father,
his mother, and in general about their family affairs, trying every time not
to mention Gemma's name--and thinking only of her. To speak more precisely,
it was not of her he was thinking, but of the morrow, the mysterious morrow
which was to bring him new, unknown happiness! It was as though a veil, a
delicate, bright veil, hung faintly fluttering before his mental vision; and
behind this veil he felt felt the presence of a youthful, motionless. divine
image, with a tender smile on its lips, and eyelids severely--with affected
severity--downcast. And this image was not the face of Gemma, it was the face
of happiness itself! For, behold, at last his hour had come, the veil had
vanished, the lips were parting, the eyelashes are raised--his divinity has
looked upon him--and at once light as from the sun, and joy and bliss unending!
He dreamed of this morrow--and his soul thrilled with joy again in the melting
torture of ever-growing expectation!
And this expectation, this torture, hindered nothing. It accompanied every
action, and did not prevent anything. It did not prevent him from dining capitally
at a third inn with Emil; and only occasionally, like a brief flash of lightning,
the thought shot across him, What if any one in the world knew? This suspense
did not prevent him from playing leap-frog with Emil after dinner. The game
took place on an open green lawn. And the confusion, the stupefaction of Sanin
may be imagined! At the very moment when, accompanied by a sharp bark from
Tartaglia, he was flying like a bird, with his legs outspread over Emil, who
was bent double, he suddenly saw on the farthest border of the lawn two officers,
in whom he recognised at once his adversary and his second, Herr von Donhof
and Herr von Richter! Each of them had stuck an eyeglass in his eye, and was
staring at him, chuckling! . . . Sanin got on his feet, turned away hurriedly,
put on the coat he had flung down, jerked out a word to Emil; the latter,
too, put on his jacket, and they both immediately made off.
It was late when they got back to Frankfort. "They'll scold me,"
Emil said to Sanin as he said good-bye to him. "Well, what does it matter?
I've had such a splendid, splendid day!"
When he got home to his hotel, Sanin found a note there from Gemma. She fixed
a meeting with him for next day, at seven o'clock in the morning, in one of
the public gardens which surround Frankfort on all sides.
How his heart throbbed! How glad he was that he had obeyed her so unconditionally!
And, my God, what was promised . . . what was not promised, by that unknown,
unique, impossible, and undubitably certain morrow!
He feasted his eyes on Gemma's note. The long, elegant tail of the letter
G, the first letter of her name, which stood at the bottom of the sheet, reminded
him of her lovely fingers, her hand. . . . He thought that he had not once
touched that hand with his lips. . . . "Italian women," he mused,
"in spite of what's said of them, are modest and severe. . . . And Gemma
above all! Queen . . . goddess . . . pure, virginal marble. . . ."
"But the time will come; and it is not far off. . . ." There was
that night in Frankfort one happy man. . . . He slept; but he might have said
of himself in the words of the poet:
"I sleep . . . but my watchful heart sleeps not."
And it fluttered as lightly as a butterfly flutters his wings, as he stoops
over the flowers in the summer sunshine.
Chapter XXVII
AT five o'clock Sanin woke up, at six he was dressed, at half-past six he
was walking up and down the public garden within sight of the little arbour
which Gemma had mentioned in her note. It was a still, warm, grey morning.
It sometimes seemed as though it were beginning to rain; but the outstretched
hand felt nothing, and only looking at one's coat-sleeve one could see traces
of tiny drops like diminutive beads, but even these were soon gone. It seemed
there had never been a breath of wind in the world. Every sound moved not,
but was shed around in the stillness. In the distance was a faint thickening
of whitish mist; in the air there was a scent of mignonette and white acacia
flowers.
In the streets the shops were not open yet, but there were already some people
walking about; occasionally a solitary carriage rumbled along . . . there
was no one walking in the garden. A gardener was in a leisurely way scraping
the pa th with a spade, and a decrepit old woman in a black woollen cloak
was hobbling across the garden walk. Sanin could not for one instant mistake
this poor old creature for Gemma; and yet his heart leaped, and he watched
attentively the retreating patch of black.
Seven! chimed the clock on the tower. Sanin stood still. Was it possible she
would not come? A shiver of cold suddenly ran through his limbs. The same
shiver came again an instant later, but from a different cause. Sanin heard
behind him light footsteps, the light rustle of a woman's dress. . . . He
turned round: she!
Gemma was coming up behind him along the path. She was wearing a grey cape
and a small dark hat. She glanced at Sanin, turned her head away, and catching
him up, passed rapidly by him.
"Gemma," he articulated, hardly audibly.
She gave him a little nod, and continued to walk on in front. He followed
her.
He breathed in broken gasps. His legs shook under him.
Gemma passed by the arbour, turned to the right, passed by a small flat fountain,
in which the sparrows were splashing busily, and, going behind a clump of
high lilacs, sank down on a bench. The place was snug and hidden. Sanin sat
down beside her.
A minute passed, and neither he nor she uttered a word. She did not even look
at him; and he gazed not at her face, but at her clasped hands, in which she
held a small parasol. What was there to tell, what was there to say, which
could compare, in importance, with the simple fact of their presence there,
together, alone, so early, so close to each other.
"You . . . are not angry with me?" Sanin articulated at last.
It would have been difficult for Sanin to have said anything more foolish
than these words . . . he was conscious of it himself. . . . But, at any rate,
the silence was broken.
"Angry?" she answered. "What for? No."
"And you believe me?" he went on.
"In what you wrote?"
"Yes."
Gemma's head sank, and she said nothing. The parasol slipped out of her hands.
She hastily caught it before it dropped on the path.
"Ah, believe me! believe what I wrote to you!" cried Sanin; all
his timidity suddenly vanished, he spoke with heat; "if there is truth
on earth--sacred, absolute truth--it's that I love, love you passionately,
Gemma."
She flung him a sideway, momentary glance, and again almost dropped the parasol.
"Believe me! believe me!" he repeated. He besought her, held out
his hands to her, and did not dare to touch her. "What do you want me
to do . . . to convince you?"
She glanced at him again.
"Tell me, Monsieur Dimitri," she began; "the day before yesterday,
when you came to talk to me, you did not, I imagine, know then . . . did not
feel . . ."
"I felt it," Sanin broke in; "but I did not know it. I have
loved you from the very instant I saw you; but I did not realise at once what
you had become to me! And besides, I heard that you were solemnly betrothed.
. . . As far as your mother's request is concerned--in the first place, how
could I refuse?--and secondly, I think I carried out her request in such a
way that you could guess. . . ."
They heard a heavy tread, and a rather stout gentleman with a knapsack over
his shoulder, apparently a foreigner, emerged from behind the clump, and staring,
with the unceremoniousness of a tourist, at the couple sitting on the garden-seat,
gave a loud cough and went on.
"Your mother," Sanin began, as soon as the sound of the heavy footsteps
had ceased, "told me your breaking off your engagement would cause a
scandal"--Gemma frowned a little--"that I was myself in part responsible
for unpleasant gossip, and that . . . consequently . . . I was, to some extent,
under an obligation to advise you not to break with your betrothed, Herr Kluber.
. . ."
"Monsieur Dimitri," said Gemma, and she passed her hand over her
hair on the side turned towards Sanin, "don't, please, call Herr Kluber
my betrothed. I shall never be his wife. I have broken with him."
"You have broken with him? when?"
"Yesterday."
"You saw him?"
"Yes. At our house. He came to see us."
"Gemma? Then you love me?"
She turned to him.
"Should . . . I have come here, if not?" she whispered, and both
her hands fell on the seat.
Sanin snatched those powerless, upturned palms, and pressed them to his eyes,
to his lips. . . . Now the veil was lifted of which he had dreamed the night
before! Here was happiness, here was its radiant form!
He raised his head, and looked at Gemma boldly and directly. She, too, looked
at him, a little downwards. Her half-shut eyes faintly glistened, dim with
light, blissful tears. Her face was not smiling . . . no! it laughed, with
a blissful, noiseless laugh.
He tried to draw her to him, but she drew back, and never ceasing to laugh
the same noiseless laugh, shook her head. "Wait a little," her happy
eyes seemed to say.
"O Gemma!" cried Sanin: "I never dreamed that you would love
me!"
"I did not expect this myself," Gemma said softly.
"How could I ever have dreamed," Sanin went on, "when I came
to Frankfort, where I only expected to remain a few hours, that I should find
here the happiness of all my life!"
"All your life? Really?" queried Gemma.
"All my life, for ever and ever!" cried Sanin with fresh ardour.
The gardener's spade suddenly scraped two paces from where they were sitting.
"Let's go home," whispered Gemma: "we'll go together--will
you?"
If she had said to him at that instant "Throw yourself in the sea, will
you?" he would have been flying headlong into the ocean before she had
uttered the last word.
They went together out of the garden and turned homewards, not by the streets
of the town, but through the outskirts.
Chapter XXVIII
SANIN walked along, at one time by Gemma's side, at another time a little
behind her. He never took his eyes off her and never ceased smiling. She seemed
to hasten . . . seemed to linger. As a matter of fact, they both--he all pale,
and she all flushed with emotion--were moving along as in a dream. What they
had done together a few instants before--that surrender of each soul to another
soul--was so intense, so new, and so moving; so suddenly everything in their
lives had been changed and displaced that they could not recover themselves,
and were only aware of a whirlwind carrying them along, like the whirlwind
on that night, which had almost flung them into each other's arms. Sanin walked
along, and felt that he even looked at Gemma with other eyes; he instantly
noted some peculiarities in her walk, in her movements,--and heavens! how
infinitely sweet and precious they were to him! And she felt that that was
how he was looking at her.
Sanin and she were in love for the first time; all the miracles of first love
were working in them. First love is like a revolution; the uniformly regular
routine of ordered life is broken down and shattered in one instant; youth
mounts the barricade, waves high its bright flag, and whatever awaits it in
the future--death or a new life--all alike it goes to meet with ecstatic welcome.
"What's this? Isn't that our old friend?" said Sanin, pointing to
a muffled-up figure, which hurriedly slipped a little aside as though trying
to remain unobserved. In the midst of his abundant happiness he felt a need
to talk to Gemma, not of love--that was a settled thing and holy--but of something
else.
"Yes, it's Pantaleone," Gemma answered gaily and happily. "Most
likely he has been following me ever since I left home; all day yesterday
he kept watching every movement I made . . . He guesses!"
"He guesses!" Sanin repeated in ecstasy. What could Gemma have said
at which he would not have been in ecstasy?
Then he asked her to tell him in detail all that had passed the day before.
And she began at once telling him, with haste, and confusion, and smiles,
and brief sighs, and brief bright looks exchanged with Sanin. She said that
after their conversation the day before yesterday, mamma had kept trying to
get out of her something positive; but that she had put off Frau Lenore with
a promise to tell her her decision within twenty-four hours; how she had demanded
this limit of time for herself, and how difficult it had been to get it; how
utterly unexpectedly Herr Kluber had made his appearance more starched and
affected than ever; how he had given vent to his indignation at the childish,
unpardonable action of the Russian stranger--"he meant your duel, Dimitri,"--which
he described as deeply insulting to him, Kluber, and how he had demanded that
"you should be at once refused admittance to the house, Dimitri."
"For," he had added--and here Gemma slightly mimicked his voice
and manner--" 'it casts a slur on my honour; as though I were not able
to defend my betrothed, had I thought it necessary or advisable! All Frankfort
will know by to-morrow that an outsider has fought a duel with an officer
on account of my betrothed--did any one ever hear of such a thing! It tarnishes
my honour!' Mamma agreed with him--fancy!--but then I suddenly told him that
he was troubling himself unnecessarily about his honour and his character,
and was unnecessarily annoyed at the gossip about his betrothed, for I was
no longer betrothed to him and would never be his wife! I must own, I had
meant to talk to you first . . . before breaking with him finally; but he
came . . . and I could not restrain myself. Mamma positively screamed with
horror, but I went into the next room and got his ring--you didn't notice,
I took it off two days ago--and gave it to him. He was fearfully offended,
but as he is fearfully self-conscious and conceited, he did not say much,
and went away. Of course I had to go through a great deal with mamma, and
it made me very wretched to see how distressed she was, and I thought I had
been a little hasty; but you see I had your note, and even apart from it I
knew . . ."
"That I love you," put in Sanin.
"Yes . . . that you were in love with me."
So Gemma talked, hesitating and smiling and dropping her voice or stopping
altogether every time any one met them or passed by. And Sanin listened ecstatically,
enjoying the very sound of her voice, as the day before he had gloated over
her handwriting.
"Mamma is very much distressed," Gemma began again, and her words
flew very rapidly one after another; "she refuses to take into consideration
that I dislike Herr Kluber, that I never was betrothed to him from love, but
only because of her urgent entreaties. . . . She suspects--you, Dimitri; that's
to say, to speak plainly, she's convinced I'm in love with you, and she is
more unhappy about it because only the day before yesterday nothing of the
sort had occurred to her, and she even begged you to advise me. . . . It was
a strange request, wasn't it? Now she calls you . . . Dimitri, a hypocrite
and a cunning fellow, says that you have betrayed her confidence, and predicts
that you will deceive me. . . ."
"But, Gemma," cried Sanin, "do you mean to say you didn't tell
her? . ."
"I told her nothing! What right had I without consulting you?"
Sanin threw up his arms. "Gemma, I hope that now, at least, you will
tell all to her and take me to her. . . . I want to convince your mother that
I am not a base deceiver!"
Sanin's bosom fairly heaved with the flood of generous and ardent emotions.
Gemma looked him full in the face. "You really want to go with me now
to mamma? to mamma, who maintains that . . . all this between us is impossible--and
can never come to pass?" There was one word Gemma could not bring herself
to utter. . . . It burnt her lips; but all the more eagerly Sanin pronounced
it.
"Marry you, Gemma, be your husband--I can imagine no bliss greater!"
To his love, his magnanimity, his determination--he was aware of no limits
now.
When she heard those words, Gemma, who had stopped still for an instant, went
on faster than ever. . . . She seemed trying to run away from this too great
and unexpected happiness!
But suddenly her steps faltered. Round the corner of a turning, a few paces
from her, in a new hat and coat, straight as an arrow and curled like a poodle--emerged
Herr Kluber. He caught sight of Gemma, caught sight of Sanin, and with a sort
of inward snort and a backward bend of his supple figure, he advanced with
a dashing swing to meet them. Sanin felt a pang; but glancing at Kluber's
face, to which its owner endeavoured, as far as in him lay, to give an expression
of scornful amazement, and even commiseration, glancing at that red-cheeked,
vulgar face, he felt a sudden rush of anger, and took a step forward.
Gemma seized his arm, and with quiet decision, giving him hers, she looked
her former betrothed full in the face. . . . The latter screwed up his face,
shrugged his shoulders, shuffled to one side, and muttering between his teeth, "The usual end to the song!" (Das alte Ende vom Liede!)--walked
away with the same dashing, slightly skipping gait.
"What did he say, the wretched creature?" asked Sanin, and would
have rushed after Kluber; but Gemma held him back and walked on with him,
not taking away the arm she had slipped into his.
The Rosellis' shop came into sight. Gemma stopped once more.
"Dimitri, Monsieur Dimitri," she said, "we are not there yet,
we have not seen mamma yet. . . . If you would rather think a little, if .
. . you are still free, Dimitri!"
In reply Sanin pressed her hand tightly to his bosom, and drew her on.
"Mamma," said Gemma, going with Sanin to the room where Frau Lenore
was sitting, "I have brought the real one!"
Chapter XXIX
IF Gemma had announced that she had brought with her cholera or death itself,
one can hardly imagine that Frau Lenore could have received the news with
greater despair. She immediately sat down in a corner, with her face to the
wall, and burst into floods of tears, positively wailed, for all the world
like a Russian peasant woman on the grave of her husband or her son. For the
first minute Gemma was so taken aback that she did not even go up to her mother
but stood still like a statue in the middle of the room; while Sanin was utterly
stupefied, to the point of almost bursting into tears himself! For a whole
hour that inconsolable wail went on--a whole hour! Pantaleone thought it better
to shut the outer door of the shop, so that no stranger should come; luckily,
it was still early. The old man himself did not know what to think, and in
any case, did not approve of the haste with which Gemma and Sanin had acted;
he could not bring himself to blame them, and was prepared to give them his
support in case of need: he greatly disliked Kluber! Emil regarded himself
as the medium of communication between his friend and his sister, and almost
prided himself on its all having turned out so splendidly! He was positively
unable to conceive why Frau Lenore was so upset, and in his heart he decided
on the spot that women, even the best of them, suffer from a lack of reasoning
power! Sanin fared worst of all. Frau Lenore rose to a howl and waved him
off with her hands, directly he approached her; and it was in vain that he
attempted once or twice to shout aloud, standing at a distance, "I ask
you for your daughter's hand!" Frau Lenore was particularly angry with
herself. "How could she have been so blind--have seen nothing? Had my
Giovann' Battista been alive," she persisted through her tears, "nothing
of this sort would have happened!" "Heavens, what's it all about?"
thought Sanin; "why, it's positively senseless!" He did not dare
to look at Gemma, nor could she pluck up courage to lift her eyes to him.
She restricted herself to waiting patiently on her mother, who at first repelled
even her. . . .
At last, by degrees, the storm abated. Frau Lenore gave over weeping, permitted
Gemma to bring her out of the corner, where she sat huddled up, to put her
into an arm-chair near the window, and to give her some orange-flower water
to drink. She permitted Sanin--not to approach . . . oh, no!--but, at any
rate, to remain in the room--she had kept clamouring for him to go away--and
did not interrupt him when he spoke. Sanin immediately availed himself of
the calm as it s et in, and displayed an astounding eloquence. He could hardly
have explained his intentions and emotions with more fire and persuasive force
even to Gemma herself. Those emotions were of the sincerest, those intentions
were of the purest, like Almaviva's in the Barber of Seville. He did not conceal
from Frau Lenore nor from himself the disadvantageous side of those intentions;
but the disadvantages were only apparent! It is true he was a foreigner; they
had not known him long, they knew nothing positive about himself or his means;
but he was prepared to bring forward all the necessary evidence that he was
a respectable person and not poor; he would refer them to the most unimpeachable
testimony of his fellow-countrymen! He hoped Gemma would be happy with him,
and that he would be able to make up to her for the separation from her own
people! . . . The allusion to "separation"--the mere word "separation"--almost
spoiled the whole business. . . . Frau Lenore began to tremble all over and
move about uneasily. . . . Sanin hastened to observe that the separation would
only be temporary, and that, in fact, possibly it would not take place at
all!
Sanin's eloquence was not thrown away. Frau Lenore began to glance at him,
though still with bitterness and reproach, no longer with the same aversion
and fury; then she suffered him to come near her, and even to sit down beside
her (Gemma was sitting on the other side); then she fell to reproaching him,--not
in looks only, but in words, which already indicated a certain softening of
heart; she fell to complaining, and her complaints became quieter and gentler;
they were interspersed with questions addressed at one time to her daughter,
and at another to Sanin; then she suffered him to take her hand and did not
at once pull it away . . . then she wept again, but her tears were now quite
of another kind. . . . Then she smiled mournfully, and lamented the absence
of Giovanni Battista, but quite on different grounds from before. . . . An
instant more and the two criminals, Sanin and Gemma, were on their knees at
her feet, and she was laying her hands on their heads in turn; another instant
and they were embracing and kissing her, and Emil, his face beaming rapturously,
ran into the room and added himself to the group so warmly united.
Pantaleone peeped into the room, smiled and frowned at the same time, and
going into the shop, opened the front door.
Chapter XXX
THE transition from despair to sadness, and from that to "gentle resignation,"
was accomplished fairly quickly in Frau Lenore; but that gentle resignation,
too, was not slow in changing into a secret satisfaction, which was, however,
concealed in every way and suppressed for the sake of appearances. Sanin had
won Frau Lenore's heart from the first day of their acquaintance; as she got
used to the idea of his being her son-in-law, she found nothing particularly
distasteful in it, though she thought it her duty to preserve a somewhat hurt,
or rather careworn, expression on her face. Besides, everything that had happened
the last few days had been so extraordinary. . . . One thing upon the top
of another. As a practical woman and a mother, Frau Lenore considered it her
duty also to put Sanin through various questions; and Sanin, who, on setting
out that morning to meet Gemma, had not a notion that he should marry her--it
is true he did not think of anything at all at that time, but simply gave
himself up to the current of his passion--Sanin entered, with perfect readiness,
one might even say with zeal, into his part--the part of the betrothed lover,
and answered all her inquiries circumstantially, exactly, with alacrity. When
she had satisfied herself that he was a real nobleman by birth, and had even
expressed some surprise that he was not a prince, Frau Lenore assumed a serious
air and "warned him betimes" that she should be quite unceremoniously
frank with him, as she was forced to be so by her sacred duty as a mother!
To which Sanin replied that he expected nothing else from her, and that he
earnestly begged her not to spare him!
Then Frau Lenore observed that Herr Kluber--as she uttered the name, she sighed
faintly, tightened her lips, and hesitated--Herr Kluber, Gemma's former betrothed,
already possessed an income of eight thousand guldens, and that with every
year this sum would rapidly be increased; and what was his, Herr Sanin's income? "Eight thousand guldens," Sanin repeated deliberately. . . . "That's
in our money . . . about fifteen thousand roubles. . . . My income is much
smaller. I have a small estate in the province of Tula. . . . With good management,
it might yield--and, in fact, it could not fail to yield--five or six thousand
. . . and if I go into the government service, I can easily get a salary of
two thousand a year."
"Into the service in Russia?" cried Frau Lenore. "Then I must
part with Gemma!"
"One might be able to enter in the diplomatic service," Sanin put
in; "I have some connections. . . . There one's duties lie abroad. Or
else, this is what one might do, and that's much the best of all: sell my
estate and employ the sum received for it in some profitable undertaking;
for instance, the improvement of your shop." Sanin was aware that he
was saying something absurd, but he was possessed by an incomprehensible recklessness!
He looked at Gemma, who, ever since the "practical" conversation
began kept getting up, walking about the room, and sitting down again--he
looked at her--and no obstacle existed for him, and he was ready to arrange
everything at once in the best way, if only she were not troubled!
"Herr Kluber, too, had intended to give me a small sum for the improvement
of the shop," Lenore observed after a slight hesitation.
"Mother! for mercy's sake, mother!" cried Gemma in Italian.
"These things must be discussed in good time, my daughter," Frau
Lenore replied in the same language. She addressed herself again to Sanin,
and began questioning him as to the laws existing in Russia as to marriage,
and whether there were no obstacles to contracting marriages with Catholics
as in Prussia. (At that time, in 1840, all Germany still remembered the controversy
between the Prussian Government and the Archbishop of Cologne upon mixed marriages.)
When Frau Lenore heard that by marrying a Russian nobleman, her daughter would
herself become of noble rank, she evinced a certain satisfaction. "But,
of course, you will first have to go to Russia?"
"Why?"
"Why? Why, to obtain the permission of your Tsar."
Sanin explained to her that that was not at all necessary . . . but that he
might certainly have to go to Russia for a very short time before his marriage--(he
said these words, and his heart ached painfully, Gemma watching him, knew
it was aching, and blushed and grew dreamy)--and that he would try to take
advantage of being in his own country to sell his estate . . . in any case
he would bring back the money needed.
"I would ask you to bring me back some good Astrakhan lambskin for a
cape," said Frau Lenore. "They're wonderfully good, I hear, and
wonderfully cheap!"
"Certainly, with the greatest pleasure, I will bring some for you and
for Gemma!" cried Sanin.
"And for me a morocco cap worked in silver," Emil interposed, putting
his head in from the next room.
"Very well, I will bring it you . . . and some slippers for Pantaleone."
"Come, that's nonsense, nonsense," observed Frau Lenore. "We
are talking now of serious matters. But there's another point," added
the practical lady. "You talk of selling your estate. But how will you
do that? Will you sell your peasants then, too?"
Sanin felt something like a stab at his heart. He remembered that in a conversation
with Signora Roselli and her daughter about serfdom, which, in his own words,
aroused his deepest indignation, he had repeatedly assured them that never
on any account would he sell his peasants, as he regarded such a sale as an
immoral act.
"I will try and sell my estate to some man I know something of,"
he articulated, not without faltering, "or perhaps the peasants themselves
will want to buy their freedom."
"That would be best of all," Frau Lenore agreed. "Though indeed
selling live people. . ."
"Barbari!" grumbled Pantaleone, who showed himself behind Emil in
the doorway, shook his topknot, and vanished.
"It's a bad business!" Sanin thought to himself, and stole a look
at Gemma. She seemed not to have heard his last words. "Well, never mind!"
he thought again. In this way the practical talk continued almost uninterruptedly
till dinner-time. Frau Lenore was completely softened at last, and already
called Sanin "Dimitri," shook her finger affectionately at him,
and promised she would punish him for his treachery. She asked many and minute
questions about his relations, because "that too is very important";
asked him to describe the ceremony of marriage as performed by the ritual
of the Russian Church, and was in raptures already at Gemma in a white dress,
with a gold crown on her head.
"She's as lovely as a queen," she murmured with motherly pride,
"indeed there's no queen like her in the world!"
"There is no one like Gemma in the world!" Sanin chimed in.
"Yes; that's why she is Gemma!" (Gemma, as every one knows, means
in Italian a precious stone.)
Gemma flew to kiss her mother. . . It seemed as if only then she breathed
freely again, and the load that had been oppressing her dropped from off her
soul.
Sanin felt all at once so happy, his heart was filled with such childish gaiety
at the thought, that here, after all, the dreams had come true to which he
had abandoned himself not long ago in these very rooms, his whole being was
in such a turmoil that he went quickly out into the shop. He felt a great
desire, come what might, to sell something in the shop, as he had done a few
days before. . . . "I have a full right to do so now!" he felt.
"Why, I am one of the family now!" And he actually stood behind
the counter, and actually kept shop, that is, sold two little girls, who came
in, a pound of sweets, giving them fully two pounds, and only taking half
the price from them.
At dinner he received an official position, as betrothed, beside Gemma. Frau
Lenore pursued her practical investigations. Emil kept laughing and urging
Sanin to take him with him to Russia It was decided that Sanin should set
off in a fortnight. Only Pantaleone showed a somewhat sullen face, so much
so that Frau Lenore reproached him. "And he was his second!" Pantaleone
gave her a glance from under his brows.
Gemma was silent almost all the time, but her face had never been lovelier
or brighter. After dinner she called Sanin out a minute into the garden, and
stopping beside the very garden-seat where she had been sorting the cherries
two days before, she said to him. "Dimitri, don't be angry with me; but
I must remind you once more that you are not to consider yourself bound .
. ."
He did not let her go on . . .
Gemma turned away her face. "And as for what mamma spoke of, do you remember,
the difference of our religion--see here! . . ."
She snatched the garnet cross that hung round her neck on a thin cord, gave
it a violent tug, snapped the cord, and handed him the cross.
"If I am yours, your faith is my faith!" Sanin's eyes were still
wet when he went back with Gemma into the house.
By the evening everything went on in its accustomed way. They even played
a game of tresette.
Chapter XXXI
SANIN woke up very early. He found himself at the highest pinnacle of human
happiness; but it was not that prevented him from sleeping; the question,
the vital, fateful question--how he could dispose of his estate as quickly
and as advantageously as possible--disturbed his rest. The most diverse plans
were mixed up in his head, but nothing had as yet come out clearly. He went
out of the house to get air and freshen himself. He wanted to present himself
to Gemma with a project ready prepared and not without.
What was the figure, somewhat ponderous and thick in the legs, but well-dressed,
walking in front of him, with a slight roll and waddle in his gait? Where
had he seen that head, covered with tufts of flaxen hair, and as it were set
right into the shoulders, that soft cushiony back, those plump arms hanging
straight down at his sides? Could it be Polozov, his old schoolfellow, whom
he had lost sight of for the last five years? Sanin overtook the figure walking
in front of him, turned round. . . . A broad, yellowish face, little pig's
eyes, with white lashes and eyebrows, a short flat nose, thick lips that looked
glued together, a round smooth chin, and that expression, sour, sluggish,
and mistrustful--yes; it was he, it was Ippolit Polozov!
"Isn't my lucky star working for me again?" flashed through Sanin's
mind.
"Polozov! Ippolit Sidoritch! Is it you?"
The figure stopped, raised his diminutive eyes, waited a little, and ungluing
his lips at last, brought out in a rather hoarse falsetto, "Dimitri Sanin?"
"That's me!" cried Sanin, and he shook one of Polozov's hands; arrayed
in tight kid-gloves of an ashen-grey colour, they hung as lifeless as before
beside his barrel-shaped legs. "Have you been here long? Where have you
come from? Where are you stopping?"
"I came yesterday from Wiesbaden," Polozov replied in deliberate
tones, "to do some shopping for my wife, and I'm going back to Wiesbaden
to-day."
"Oh, yes! You're married, to be sure, and they say, to such a beauty!"
Polozov turned his eyes away. "Yes, they say so."
Sanin laughed. "I see you're just the same . . . as phlegmatic as you
were at school."
"Why should I be different?"
"And they do say," Sanin added with special emphasis on the word
"do," "that your wife is very rich."
"They say that too."
"Do you mean to say, Ippolit Sidoritch, you are not certain on that point?"
"I don't meddle, my dear Dimitri . . . Pavlovitch? Yes, Pavlovitch!--in
my wife's affairs."
"You don't meddle? Not in any of her affairs?"
Polozov again shifted his eyes. "Not in any, my boy. She does as she
likes, and so do I."
"Where are you going now?" Sanin inquired. "I'm not going anywhere
just now; I'm standing in the street and talking to you; but when we've finished
talking, I'm going back to my hotel, and am going to have lunch."
"Would you care for my company?"
"You mean at lunch?"
"Yes."
"Delighted, it's much pleasanter to eat in company. You're not a great
talker, are you?"
"I think not."
"So much the better."
Polozov went on. Sanin walked beside him. And Sanin speculated--Polozov's
lips were glued together, again he snorted heavily, and waddled along in silence--Sanin
speculated in what way had this booby succeeded in catching a rich and beautiful
wife. He was not rich himself, nor distinguished, nor clever; at school he
had passed for a dull, slow-witted boy, sleepy, and greedy, and had borne
the nickname "driveller." It was marvellous!
"But if his wife is very rich, they say she's the daughter of some sort
of a contractor, won't she buy my estate? Though he does say he doesn't interfere
in any of his wife's affairs, that passes belief, really! Besides, I will
name a moderate, reasonable price! Why not try? Perhaps, it's all my lucky
star. . . . Resolved! I'll have a try!"
Polozov led Sanin to one of the best hotels in Frankfort, in which he was,
of course, occupying the best apartments. On the tables and chairs lay piles
of packages, cardboard boxes, and parcels. "All purchases, my boy, for
Maria Nikolaevna!" (that was the name of the wife of Ippolit Sidoritch).
Polozov dropped into an arm-chair, groaned, "Oh, the heat!" and
loosened his cravat. Then he rang up the headwaiter, and ordered with intense
care a very lavish luncheon. "And at one, the carriage is to be ready!
Do you hear, at one o'clock sharp!"
The head-waiter obsequiously bowed, and cringingly withdrew.
Polozov unbuttoned his waistcoat. From the very way in which he raised his
eyebrows, gasped, and wrinkled up his nose, one could see that talking would
be a great labour to him, and that he was waiting in some trepidation to see
whether Sanin was going to oblige him to use his tongue, or whether he would
take the task of keeping up the conversation on himself.
Sanin understood his companion's disposition of mind, and so he did not burden
him with questions; he restricted himself to the most essential. He learnt
that he had been for two years in the service (in the Uhlans! how nice he
must have looked in the short uniform jacket!) that he had married three years
before, and had now been for two years abroad with his wife, "who is
now undergoing some sort of cure at Wiesbaden," and was then going to
Paris. On his side too, Sanin did not enlarge much on his past life and his
plans; he went straight to the principal point--that is, he began talking
of his intention of selling his estate.
Polozov listened to him in silence, his eyes straying from time to time to
the door, by which the luncheon was to appear. The luncheon did appear at
last. The head-waiter, accompanied by two other attendants, brought in several
dishes under silver covers.
"Is the property in the Tula province?" said Polozov, seating himself
at the table, and tucking a napkin into his shirt collar.
"Yes."
"In the Efremovsky district . . . I know it."
"Do you know my place, Aleksyevka?" Sanin asked, sitting down too
at the table.
"Yes, I know it." Polozov thrust in his mouth a piece of omelette
with truffles. "Maria Nikolaevna, my wife, has an estate in that neighbourhood.
. . . Uncork that bottle, waiter! You've a good piece of land, only your peasants
have cut down the timber. Why are you selling it?"
"I want the money, my friend. I would sell it cheap. Come, you might
as well buy it . . . by the way."
Polozov gulped down a glass of wine, wiped his lips with the napkin, and again
set to work chewing slowly and noisily.
"Oh," he enunciated at last. . . . "I don't go in for buying
estates; I've no capital. Pass the butter. Perhaps my wife now would buy it.
You talk to her about it. If you don't ask too much, she's not above thinking
of that. . . . What asses these Germans are, really! They can't cook fish.
What could be simpler, one wonders? And yet they go on about "uniting
the Fatherland." Waiter, take away that beastly stuff!"
"Does your wife really manage . . . business matters herself?" Sanin
inquired.
"Yes. Try the cutlets--they're good. I can recommend them. I've told
you already, Dimitri Pavlovitch, I don't interfere in any of my wife's concerns,
and I tell you so again."
Polozov went on munching.
"H'm. . . . But how can I have a talk with her, Ippolit Sidoritch?"
"It's very simple, Dimitri Pavlovitch. Go to Wiesbaden. It's not far
from here. Waiter, haven't you any English mustard? No? Brutes! Only don't
lose any time. We're starting the day after to-morrow. Let me pour you out
a glass of wine; it's wine with a bouquet--no vinegary stuff.
Polozov's face was flushed and animated; it was never animated but when he
was eating --or drinking.
"Really, I don't know, how that could be managed," Sanin muttered.
"But what makes you in such a hurry about it all of a sudden?"
"There is a reason for being in a hurry, brother."
"And do you need a lot of money?"
"Yes, a lot. I . . . how can I tell you? I propose . . . getting married."
Polozov set the glass he had been lifting to his lips on the table.
"Getting married!" he articulated in a voice thick with astonishment,
and he folded his podgy hands on his stomach. "So suddenly?"
"Yes . . . soon."
"Your intended is in Russia, of course?"
"No, not in Russia."
"Where then?"
"Here in Frankfort."
"And who is she?"
"A German; that is, no--an Italian. A resident here."
"With a fortune?"
"No, without a fortune."
"Then I suppose your love is very ardent?"
"How absurd you are! Yes, very ardent."
"And it's for that you must have money?"
"Well, yes . . . yes, yes."
Polozov gulped down his wine, rinsed his mouth, and washed his hands, carefully
wiped them on the napkin, took out and lighted a cigar. Sanin watched him
in silence.
"There's one means," Polozov grunted at last, throwing his head
back, and blowing out the smoke in a thin ring. "Go to my wife. If she
likes, she can take all the bother off your hands."
"But how can I see your wife? You say you are starting the day after
to-morrow?"
Polozov closed his eyes.
"I'll tell you what," he said at last, rolling the cigar in his
lips, and sighing. "Go home, get ready as quick as you can, and come
here. At one o'clock I am going, there's plenty of room in my carriage. I'll
take you with me. That's the best plan. And now I'm going to have a nap. I
must always have a nap, brother, after a meal. Nature demands it, and I won't
go against it. And don't you disturb me."
Sanin thought and thought, and suddenly raised his head; he had made up his
mind.
"Very well, agreed, and thank you. At half-past twelve I'll be here,
and we'll go together to Wiesbaden. I hope your wife won't be angry. . . ."
But Polozov was already snoring. He muttered, "Don't disturb me!" gave a kick, and fell asleep, like a baby.
Sanin once more scanned his clumsy figure, his head, his neck, his upturned
chin, round as an apple, and going out of the hotel, set off with rapid strides
to the Rosellis' shop. He had to let Gemma know.
Chapter XXXII
HE found her in the shop with her mother. Frau Lenore was stooping down, measuring
with a big folding foot-rule the space between the windows. On seeing Sanin,
she stood up, and greeted him cheerfully, though with a shade of embarrassment.
"What you said yesterday," she began, "has set my head in a
whirl with ideas as to how we could improve our shop. Here, I fancy we might
put a couple of cupboards with shelves of looking-glass. You know, that's
the fashion nowadays. And then . . ."
"Excellent, excellent," Sanin broke in, "we must think it all
over. . . . But come here, I want to tell you something." He took Frau
Lenore and Gemma by the arm, and led them into the next room. Frau Lenore
was alarmed, and the foot-rule slipped out of her hands. Gemma too was almost
frightened, but she took an intent look at Sanin, and was reassured. His face,
though preoccupied, expressed at the same time keen self-confidence and determination.
He asked both the women to sit down, while he remained standing before them,
and gesticulating with his hands and ruffling up his hair, he told them all
his story; his meeting with Polozov, his proposed expedition to Wiesbaden,
the chance of selling the estate. "Imagine my happiness," he cried
in conclusion: "things have taken such a turn that I may even, perhaps,
not have to go to Russia! And we can have our wedding much sooner than I had
anticipated!"
"When must you go?" asked Gemma.
"To-day, in an hour's time; my friend has ordered a carriage--he will
take me."
"You will write to us?"
"At once! directly I have had a talk with this lady, I will write."
"This lady, you say, is very rich?" queried the practical Frau Lenore.
"Exceedingly rich! her father was a millionaire, and he left everything
to her."
"Everything--to her alone? Well, that's so much the better for you. Only
mind, don't let your property go too cheap! Be sensible and firm. Don't let
yourself be carried away! I understand your wishing to be Gemma's husband
as soon as possible . . . but prudence before everything! Don't forget: the
better price you get for your estate, the more there will be for you two,
and for your children."
Gemma turned away, and Sanin gave another wave of his hand. "You can
rely on my prudence, Frau Lenore! Indeed, I shan't do any bargaining with
her. I shall tell her the fair price; if she'll give it--good; if not, let
her go."
"Do you know her--this lady?" asked Gemma.
"I have never seen her."
"And when will you come back?"
"If our negotiations come to nothing--the day after to-morrow; if they
turn out favourably, perhaps I may have to stay a day or two longer. In any
case I shall not linger a minute beyond what's necessary. I am leaving my
heart here, you know! But I have said what I had to say to you, and I must
run home before setting off too. . . . Give me your hand for luck, Frau Lenore--that's
what we always do in Russia."
"The right or the left?"
"The left, it's nearer the heart. I shall reappear the day after to-morrow
with my shield or on it! Something tells me I shall come back in triumph!
Good-bye, my good dear ones. . . ."
He embraced and kissed Frau Lenore, but he asked Gemma to follow him into
her room --for just a minute--as he must tell her something of great importance.
He simply wanted to say good-bye to her alone. Frau Lenore saw that, and felt
no curiosity as to the matter of such great importance.
Sanin had never been in Gemma's room before. All the magic of love, all its
fire and rapture and sweet terror, seemed to flame up and burst into his soul,
directly he crossed its sacred threshold. . . . He cast a look of tenderness
about him, fell at the sweet girl's feet and pressed his face against her
waist. . . .
"You are mine," she whispered: "you will be back soon?"
"I am yours. I will come back," he declared, catching his breath.
"I shall be longing for you back, my dear one!"
A few instants later Sanin was running along the street to his lodging. He
did not even notice that Pantaleone, all dishevelled, had darted out of the
shop-door after him, and was shouting something to him and was shaking, as
though in menace, his lifted hand.
Exactly at a quarter to one Sanin presented himself before Polozov. The carriage
with four horses was already, standing at the hotel gates. On seeing Sanin,
Polozov merely commented, "Oh you've made up your mind?" and putting
on his hat, cloak, and over-shoes, and stuffing cotton-wool into his ears,
though it was summer-time, went out on to the steps. The waiters, by his directions,
disposed all his numerous purchases in the inside of the carriage, lined the
place where he was to sit with silk cushions, bags, and bundles, put a hamper
of provisions for his feet to rest on, and tied a trunk on to the box. Polozov
paid with a liberal hand, and supported by the deferential door-keeper, whose
face was still respectful, though he was unseen behind him, he climbed gasping
into the carriage, sat down, disarranged everything about him thoroughly,
took out and lighted a cigar, and only then extended a finger to Sanin, as
though to say, "Get in, you too!" Sanin placed himself beside him.
Polozov sent orders by the door-keeper to the postillion to drive carefully--if
he wanted drinks; the carriage steps grated, the doors slammed, and the carriage
rolled off.
Chapter XXXIII
IT takes less than an hour in these days by rail from Frankfort to Wiesbaden;
at that time the extra post did it in three hours. They changed horses five
times. Part of the time Polozov dozed and part of the time he simply shook
from side to side, holding a cigar in his teeth; he talked very little; he
did not once look out of the window; picturesque views did not interest him;
he even announced that "nature was the death of him!" Sanin did
not speak either, nor did he admire the scenery; he had no thought for it.
He was all absorbed in reflections and memories. At the stations Polozov paid
with exactness, took the time by his watch, and tipped the postillions--more
or less--according to their zeal. When they had gone half way, he took two
oranges out of the hamper of edibles, and choosing out the better, offered
the other to Sanin. Sanin looked steadily at his companion, and suddenly burst
out laughing.
"What are you laughing at?" the latter inquired, very carefully
peeling his orange with his short white nails.
"What at?" repeated Sanin. "Why, at our journey together."
"What about it?" Polozov inquired again, dropping into his mouth
one of the longitudinal sections into which an orange parts.
"It's so very strange. Yesterday I must confess I thought no more of
you than of the Emperor of China, and to-day I'm driving with you to sell
my estate to your wife, of whom, too, I have not the slightest idea."
"Anything may happen," responded Polozov. "When you've lived
a bit longer, you won't be surprised at anything. For instance, can you fancy
me riding as an orderly officer? But I did, and the Grand Duke Mihail Pavlovitch
gave the order, 'Trot! let him trot, that fat cornet! Trot now! Look sharp!'"
Sanin scratched behind his ear.
"Tell me, please, Ippolit Sidoritch, what is your wife like? What is
her character? It's very necessary for me to know that, you see."
"It was very well for him to shout, 'Trot!' " Polozov went on with
sudden vehemence, "But me! how about me? I thought to myself, "You
can take your honours and epaulettes--and leave me in peace!" But . .
. you asked about my wife? What my wife is? A person like any one else. Don't
wear your heart upon your sleeve with her--she doesn't like that. The great
thing is to talk a lot to her . . . something for her to laugh at. Tell her
about your love, or something . . . but make it more amusing, you know."
"How more amusing?"
"Oh, you told me, you know, that you were in love, wanting to get married.
Well, then, describe that."
Sanin was offended. "What do you find laughable in that?"
Polozov only rolled his eyes. The juice from the orange was trickling down
his chin.
"Was it your wife sent you to Frankfort to shop for her?" asked
Sanin after a short time.
"Yes, it was she."
"What are the purchases?"
"Toys, of course."
"Toys? have you any children?"
Polozov positively moved away from Sanin. "That's likely! What do I want
with children? Feminine fallals . . . finery. For the toilet."
"Do you mean to say you understand such things?"
"To be sure I do."
"But didn't you tell me you didn't interfere in any of your wife's affairs?"
"I don't in any other. But this . . . is no consequence. To pass the
time--one may do it. And my wife has confidence in my taste. And I'm a first-rate
hand at bargaining."
Polozov began to speak by jerks; he was exhausted already.
"And is your wife very rich?"
"Rich; yes, rather! Only she keeps the most of it for herself."
"But I expect you can't complain either?"
"Well, I'm her husband. I'm hardly likely not to get some benefit from
it! And I'm of use to her. With me she can do just as she likes! I'm easy-going!"
Polozov wiped his face with a silk handkerchief and puffed painfully, as though
to say, "Have mercy on me; don't force me to utter another word. You
see how hard it is for me."
Sanin left him in peace, and again sank into meditation.
The hotel in Wiesbaden, before which the carriage stopped, was exactly like
a palace. Bells were promptly set ringing in its inmost recesses; a fuss and
bustle arose; men of good appearance in black frock-coats skipped out at the
principal entrance; a door-keeper who was a blaze of gold opened the carriage
doors with a flourish.
Like some triumphant general Polozov alighted and began to ascend a staircase
strewn with rugs and smelling of agreeable perfumes. To him flew up another
man, also very well dressed but with a Russian face--his valet. Polozov observed
to him that for the future he should always take him everywhere with him,
for the night before at Frankfort, he, Polozov, had been left for the night
without hot water! The valet portrayed his horror on his face, and bending
down quickly, took off his master's goloshes.
"Is Maria Nikolaevna at home?" inquired Polozov.
"Yes, sir. Madam is pleased to be dressing. Madam is pleased to be dining
to-night at the Countess Lasunsky's."
"Ah! there? . . . Stay! There are things there in the carriage; get them
all yourself and bring them up. And you, Dimitri Pavlovitch," added Polozov,
"take a room for yourself and come in in three-quarters of an hour. We
will dine together."
Polozov waddled off, while Sanin asked for an inexpensive room for himself;
and after setting his attire to rights, and resting a little, he repaired
to the immense apartment occupied by his Serenity (Durchlaucht) Prince von
Polozov.
He found this "prince" enthroned in a luxurious velvet arm-chair
in the middle of a most magnificent drawing-room. Sanin's phlegmatic friend
had already had time to have a bath and to array himself in a most sumptuous
satin dressing-gown; he had put a crimson fez on his head. Sanin approached
him and scrutinised him for some time. Polozov was sitting rigid as an idol;
he did not even turn his face in his direction, did not even move an eyebrow,
did not utter a sound. It was truly a sublime spectacle! After having admired
him for a couple of minutes, Sanin was on the point of speaking, of breaking
this hallowed silence, when suddenly the door from the next room was thrown
open, and in the doorway appeared a young and beautiful lady in a white silk
dress trimmed with black lace, and with diamonds on her arms and neck--Maria
Nikolaevna Polozov. Her thick fair hair fell on both sides of her head, braided,
but not fastened up into a knot.
Chapter XXXIV
"AH, I beg your pardon!" she said with a smile half-embarrassed,
half-ironical, instantly taking hold of one end of a plait of her hair and
fastening on Sanin her large, grey, clear eyes. "I did not think you
had come yet."
"Sanin, Dimitri Pavlovitch--known him from a boy," observed Polozov,
as before not turning towards him and not getting up, but pointing at him
with one finger.
"Yes. . . . I know. . . . You told me before. Very glad to make your
acquaintance. But I wanted to ask you, Ippolit Sidoritch. . . . My maid seems
to have lost her senses today . . ."
"To do your hair up?"
"Yes, yes, please. I beg your pardon," Maria Nikolaevna repeated
with the same smile. She nodded to Sanin, and turning swiftly, vanished through
the doorway, leaving behind her a fleeting but graceful impression of a charming
neck, exquisite shoulders, an exquisite figure.
Polozov got up, and rolling ponderously, went out by the same door.
Sanin did not doubt for a single second that his presence in "Prince
Polozov's" drawing-room was a fact perfectly well known to its mistress;
the whole point of her entry had been the display of her hair, which was certainly
beautiful. Sanin was inwardly delighted indeed at this freak on the part of
Madame Polozov; if, he thought, she is anxious to impress me, to dazzle me,
perhaps, who knows, she will be accommodating about the price of the estate.
His heart was so full of Gemma that all other women had absolutely no significance
for him; he hardly noticed them; and this time he went no further than thinking,
"Yes, it was the truth they told me; that lady's really magnificent to
look at!"
But had he not been in such an exceptional state of mind he would most likely
have expressed himself differently; Maria Nikolaevna Polozov, by birth Kolishkin,
was a very striking personality. And not that she was of a beauty to which
no exception could be taken; traces of her plebeian origin were rather clearly
apparent in her. Her forehead was low, her nose rather fleshy and turned up;
she could boast neither of the delicacy of her skin nor of the elegance of
her hands and feet--but what did all that matter? Any one meeting her would
not, to use Pushkin's words, have stood still before "the holy shrine
of beauty," but before the sorcery of a half-Russian, half- Gipsy woman's
body in its full flower and full power . . . and he would have been nothing
loath to stand still!
But Gemma's image preserved Sanin like the three-fold armour of which the
poets sing.
Ten minutes later Maria Nikolaevna appeared again, escorted by her husband.
She went up to Sanin . . . and her walk was such that some eccentrics of that--alas!--already
distant day, were simply crazy over her walk alone. "That woman, when
she comes towards one, seems as though she is bringing all the happiness of
one's life to meet one," one of them used to say. She went up to Sanin,
and holding out her hand to him, said in her caressing and, as it were, subdued
voice in Russian, "You will wait for me, won't you? I'll be back soon."
Sanin bowed respectfully, while Maria Nikolaevna vanished behind the curtain
over the outside door; and as she vanished turned her head back over her shoulder,
and smiled again, and again left behind her the same impression of grace.
When she smiled, not one and not two, but three dimples came out on each cheek,
and her eyes smiled more than her lips--long, crimson, juicy lips with two
tiny moles on the left side of them.
Polozov waddled into the room and again established himself in the arm-chair.
He was speechless as before; but from time to time a queer smile puffed out
his colourless and already wrinkled cheeks. He looked like an old man, though
he was only three years older than Sanin.
The dinner with which he regaled his guest would of course have satisfied
the most exacting gourmand, but to Sanin it seemed endless, insupportable!
Polozov ate slowly, "with feeling, with judgment, with deliberation,"
bending attentively over his plate, and sniffing at almost every morsel. First
he rinsed his mouth with wine, then swallowed it and smacked his lips. . .
. Over the roast meat he suddenly began to talk--but of what? Of merino sheep,
of which he was intending to order a whole flock, and in such detail, with
such tenderness using all the while endearing pet names for them. After drinking
a cup of coffee, hot to boiling point (he had several times in a voice of
tearful irritation mentioned to the waiter that he had been served the evening
before with coffee, cold--cold as ice!) and bitten off the end of a Havannah
cigar with his crooked yellow teeth, he dropped off, as his habit was, into
a nap, to the intense delight of Sanin, who began walking up and down with
noiseless steps on the soft carpet, and dreaming of his life with Gemma and
of what news he would bring back to her. Polozov, however, awoke, as he remarked
himself, earlier than usual--he had slept only an hour and a half--and after
drinking a glass of iced seltzer water, and swallowing eight spoonfuls of
jam, Russian jam, which his valet brought him in a dark-green genuine "Kiev"
jar, and without which, in his own words, he could not live, he stared with
his swollen eyes at Sanin and asked him wouldn't he like to play a game of
"fools" with him. Sanin agreed readily; he was afraid that Polozov
would begin talking again about lambs and ewes and fat tails. The host and
the visitor both adjourned to the drawing-room, the waiter brought in the
cards, and the game began, not,--of course, for money.
At this innocent diversion Maria Nikolaevna found them on her return from
the Countess Lasunsky's. She laughed aloud directly she came into the room
and saw the cards and the open card-table. Sanin jumped up, but she cried, "Sit still; go on with the game. I'll change my dress directly and come
back to you," and vanished again with a swish of her dress, pulling off
her gloves as she went.
She did in fact return very soon. Her evening dress she had exchanged for
a full lilac silk tea-gown, with open hanging sleeves; a thick twisted cord
was fastened round her waist. She sat down by her husband, and, waiting till
he was left "fool," said to him, "Come, dumpling, that's enough!"
(At the word "dumpling" Sanin glanced at her in surprise, and she
smiled gaily, answering his look with a look, and displaying all the dimples
on her cheeks.) "I see you are sleepy; kiss my hand and get along; and
Monsieur Sanin and I will have a chat together alone."
"I'm not sleepy," observed Polozov, getting up ponderously from
his easy-chair; "but as for getting along, I'm ready to get along and
to kiss your hand." She gave him the palm of her hand, still smiling
and looking at Sanin.
Polozov, too, looked at him, and went away without taking leave of him.
"Well, tell me, tell me," said Maria Nikolaevna eagerly, setting
both her bare elbows on the table and impatiently tapping the nails of one
hand against the nails of the other, "Is it true, they say, you are going
to be married?"
As she said these words, Maria Nikolaevna positively bent her head a little
on one side so as to look more intently and piercingly into Sanin's eyes.
Chapter XXXV
THE free and easy deportment of Madame Polozov would probably for the first
moment have disconcerted Sanin--though he was not quite a novice and had knocked
about the world a little--if he had not again seen in this very freedom and
familiarity a good omen for his undertaking. "We must humour this rich
lady's caprices," he decided inwardly; and as unconstrainedly as she
had questioned him he answered, "Yes; I am going to be married."
"To whom? To a foreigner?"
"Yes."
"Did you get acquainted with her lately? In Frankfort?"
"Yes."
"And what is she? May I know?"
"Certainly. She is a confectioner's daughter."
Maria Nikolaevna opened her eyes wide and lifted her eyebrows.
"Why, this is delightful," she commented in a drawling voice; "this
is exquisite! I imagined that young men like you were not to be met with anywhere
in these days. A confectioner's daughter!"
"I see that surprises you," observed Sanin with some dignity; "but
in the first place, I have none of these prejudices . . ."
"In the first place, it doesn't surprise me in the least," Maria
Nikolaevna interrupted; "I have no prejudices either. I'm the daughter
of a peasant myself. There! what can you say to that? What does surprise and
delight me is to have come across a man who's not afraid to love. You do love
her, I suppose?"
"Yes."
"Is she very pretty?"
Sanin was slightly stung by this last question. . . . However, there was no
drawing back.
"You know, Maria Nikolaevna," he began, "every man thinks the
face of his beloved better than all others; but my betrothed is really beautiful."
"Really? In what style? Italian? antique?"
"Yes; she has very regular features."
"You have not got her portrait with you?"
"No." (At that time photography was not yet talked of. Daguerrotypes
had hardly begun to be common.)
"What's her name?"
"Her name is Gemma."
"And yours?"
"Dimitri."
"And your patronymic?"
"Pavlovitch."
"Do you know," Maria Nikolaevna said, still in the same drawling
voice, "I like you very much, Dimitri Pavlovitch. You must be an excellent
fellow. Give me your hand. Let us be friends."
She pressed his hand tightly in her beautiful, white, strong fingers. Her
hand was a little smaller than his hand, but much warmer and smoother and
whiter and more full of life.
"Only, do you know what strikes me?"
"What?"
"You won't be angry? No? You say she is betrothed to you. But was that
. . . was that quite necessary?"
Sanin frowned. "I don't understand you, Maria Nikolaevna."
Maria Nikolaevna gave a soft low laugh, and shaking her head tossed back the
hair that was falling on her cheeks. "Decidedly--he's delightful,"
she commented half pensively, half carelessly. "A perfect knight! After
that, there's no believing in the people who maintain that the race of idealists
is extinct!"
Maria Nikolaevna talked Russian all the time, an astonishingly pure true Moscow
Russian, such as the people, not the nobles speak.
"You've been brought up at home, I expect, in a God-fearing, old orthodox
family?" she queried. "You're from what province?"
"Tula."
"Oh! so we're from the same part. My father . . . I daresay you know
who my father was?"
"Yes, I know."
"He was born in Tula. . . . He was a Tula man. Well . . . well. Come,
let us get to business now."
"That is . . . how come to business? What do you mean to say by that?"
Maria Nikolaevna half-closed her eyes. "Why, what did you come here for?"
(when she screwed up her eyes, their expression became very kindly and a little
bantering, when she opened them wide, into their clear, almost cold brilliancy,
there came something ill-natured . . . something menacing. Her eyes gained
a peculiar beauty from her eyebrows, which were thick, and met in the centre,
and had the smoothness of sable fur). "Don't you want me to buy your
estate? You want money for your nuptials? Don't you?"
"Yes."
"And do you want much?"
"I should be satisfied with a few thousand francs at first. Your husband
knows my estate. You can consult him--I would take a very moderate price."
Maria Nikolaevna tossed her head from left to right. "In the first place,"
she began in deliberate tones, drumming with the tips of her fingers on the
cuff of Sanin's coat, "I am not in the habit of consulting my husband,
except about matters of dress--he's my right hand in that; and in the second
place, why do you say that you will fix a low price? I don't want to take
advantage of your being very much in love at the moment, and ready to make
any sacrifices. . . . I won't accept sacrifices of any kind from you. What?
Instead of encouraging you . . . come, how is one to express it properly?--in
your noble sentiments, eh? am I to fleece you? that's not my way. I can be
hard on people, on occasion--only not in that way."
Sanin was utterly unable to make out whether she was laughing at him or speaking
seriously, and only said to himself: "Oh, I can see one has to mind what
one's about with you!"
A man-servant came in with a Russian samovar, tea-things, cream, biscuits,
etc., on a big tray; he set all these good things on the table between Sanin
and Madame Polozov, and retired.
She poured him out a cup of tea. "You don't object?" she queried,
as she put sugar in his cup with her fingers . . . though sugar-tongs were
lying close by.
"Oh, please! . . . From such a lovely hand . . ."
He did not finish his phrase, and almost choked over a sip of tea, while she
watched him attentively and brightly.
"I spoke of a moderate price for my land," he went on, "because
as you are abroad just now, I can hardly suppose you have a great deal of
cash available, and in fact, I feel myself that the sale . . . the purchase
of my land, under such conditions is something exceptional, and I ought to
take that into consideration."
Sanin got confused, and lost the thread of what he was saying, while Maria
Nikolaevna softly leaned back in her easy-chair, folded her arms, and watched
him with the same attentive bright look. He was silent at last.
"Never mind, go on, go on," she said, as it were coming to his aid;
"I'm listening to you. I like to hear you; go on talking."
Sanin fell to describing his estate, how many acres it contained, and where
it was situated, and what were its agricultural advantages, and what profit
could be made from it . . . he even referred to the picturesque situation
of the house; while Maria Nikolaevna still watched him, and watched more and
more intently and radiantly, and her lips faintly stirred, without smiling:
she bit them. He felt awkward at last; he was silent a second time.
"Dimitri Pavlovitch," began Maria Nikolaevna, and sank into thought
again. . . . "Dimitri Pavlovitch," she repeated. . . . "Do
you know what: I am sure the purchase of your estate will be a very profitable
transaction for me, and that we shall come to terms; but you must give me
two days. . . . Yes, two days' grace. You are able to endure two days' separation
from your betrothed, aren't you? Longer I won't keep you against your will--I
give you my word of honour. But if you want five or six thousand francs at
once, I am ready with great pleasure to let you have it as a loan, and then
we'll settle later."
Sanin got up. "I must thank you, Maria Nikolaevna, for your kindhearted
and friendly readiness to do a service to a man almost unknown to you. But
if that is your decided wish, then I prefer to await your decision about my
estate--I will stay here two days."
"Yes; that is my wish, Dimitri Pavlovitch. And will it be very hard for
you? Very? Tell me."
"I love my betrothed, Maria Nikolaevna, and to be separated from her
is hard for me."
"Ah! you've a heart of gold!" Maria Nikolaevna commented with a
sigh. "I promise not to torment you too much. Are you going?"
"It is late," observed Sanin.
"And you want to rest after your journey, and your game of "fools" with my husband. Tell me, were you a great friend of Ippolit Sidoritch, my
husband?"
"We were educated at the same school."
"And was he the same then?"
"The same as what?" inquired Sanin.
Maria Nikolaevna burst out laughing, and laughed till she was red in the face;
she put her handkerchief to her lips, rose from her chair, and swaying as
though she were tired, went up to Sanin, and held out her hand to him.
He bowed over it, and went towards the door.
"Come early to-morrow--do you hear?" she called after him. He looked
back as he went out of the room, and saw that she had again dropped into an
easy-chair, and flung both arms behind her head. The loose sleeves of her
tea-gown fell open almost to her shoulders, and it was impossible not to admit
that the pose of the arms, that the whole figure, was enchantingly beautiful.
Chapter XXXVI
LONG after midnight the lamp was burning in Sanin's room. He sat down to the
table and wrote to "his Gemma." He told her everything; he described
the Polozovs--husband and wife--but, more than all, enlarged on his own feelings,
and ended by appointing a meeting with her in three days!!! (with three marks
of exclamation). Early in the morning he took this letter to the post, and
went for a walk in the garden of the Kurhaus, where music was already being
played. There were few people in it as yet; he stood before the arbour in
which the orchestra was placed, listened to an adaptation of airs from "Robert
le Diable;" and after drinking some coffee, turned into a solitary side
walk, sat down on a bench, and fell into a reverie. The handle of a parasol
gave him a rapid, and rather vigorous, thump on the shoulder. He started.
. . . Before him in a light, grey-green barege dress, in a white tulle hat,
and suede gloves, stood Maria Nikolaevna, fresh and rosy as a summer morning,
though the languor of sound unbroken sleep had not yet quite vanished from
her movements and her eyes.
"Good-morning," she said. "I sent after you to-day, but you'd
already gone out. I've only just drunk my second glass--they're making me
drink the water here, you know--whatever for, there's no telling . . . am
I not healthy enough? And now I have to walk for a whole hour. Will you be
my companion? And then we'll have some coffee."
"I've had some already," Sanin observed, getting up; "but I
shall be very glad to have a walk with you."
"Very well, give me your arm then; don't be afraid: your betrothed is
not here--she won't see you."
Sanin gave a constrained smile. He experienced a disagreeable sensation every
time Maria Nikolaevna referred to Gemma. However, he made haste to bend towards
her obediently. . . . Maria Nikolaevna's arm slipped slowly and softly into
his arm, and glided over it, and seemed to cling tight to it.
"Come--this way," she said to him, putting up her open parasol over
her shoulder. "I'm quite at home in this park; I will take you to the
best places. And do you know what? (she very often made use of this expression),
we won't talk just now about that sale, we'll have a thorough discussion of
that after lunch; but you must tell me now about yourself. . . so that I may
know whom I have to do with. And afterwards, if you like, I will tell you
about myself. Do you agree?"
"But, Maria Nikolaevna, what interest can there be for you . . ."
"Stop, stop. You don't understand me. I don't want to flirt with you."
Maria Nikolaevna shrugged her shoulders. "He's got a betrothed like an
antique statue, is it likely I am going to flirt with him? But you've something
to sell, and I'm the purchaser. I want to know what your goods are like. Well,
of course, you must show what they are like. I don't only want to know what
I'm buying, but whom I'm buying from. That was my father's rule. Come, begin
. . . come, if not from childhood--come now, have you been long abroad? And
where have you been up till now? Only don't walk so fast, we're in no hurry."
"I came here from Italy, where I spent several months."
"Ah, you feel, it seems, a special attraction towards everything Italian.
It's strange you didn't find your lady-love there. Are you fond of art? of
pictures? or more of music?"
"I am fond of art. . . . I like everything beautiful."
"And music?"
"I like music too."
"Well, I don't at all. I don't care for anything but Russian songs--and
that in the country and in the spring--with dancing, you know . . . red shirts,
wreaths of beads, the young grass in the meadows, the smell of smoke . . .
delicious! But we weren't talking of me. Go on, tell me."
Maria Nikolaevna walked on, and kept looking at Sanin. She was tall--her face
was almost on a level with his face.
He began to talk--at first reluctantly, unskilfully--but afterwards he talked
more freely, chattered away in fact. Maria Nikolaevna was a very good listener;
and moreover she seemed herself so frank, that she led others unconsciously
on to frankness. She possessed that great gift of "intimateness"--le
terrible don de la familiarite--to which Cardinal Retz refers. Sanin talked
of his travels, of his life in Petersburg, of his youth. . . . Had Maria Nikolaevna
been a lady of fashion, with refined manners, he would never have opened out
so; but she herself spoke of herself as a "good fellow," who had
no patience with ceremony of any sort; it was in those words that she characterised
herself to Sanin. And at the same time this "good fellow" walked
by his side with feline grace, slightly bending towards him, and peeping into
his face; and this "good fellow" walked in the form of a young feminine
creature, full of the tormenting, fiery, soft and seductive charm, of which--for
the undoing of us poor weak sinful men--only Slav natures are possessed, and
but few of them, and those never of pure Slav blood, with no foreign alloy.
Sanin's walk with Maria Nikolaevna, Sanin's talk with Maria Nikolaevna lasted
over an hour. And they did not stop once; they kept walking about the endless
avenues of the park, now mounting a hill and admiring the view as they went,
and now going down into the valley, and getting hidden in the thick shadows,--and
all the while arm-in-arm. At times Sanin felt positively irritated; he had
never walked so long with Gemma, his darling Gemma . . . but this lady had
simply taken possession of him, and there was no escape! "Aren't you
tired?" he said to her more than once. "I never get tired,"
she answered. Now and then they met other people walking in the park; almost
all of them bowed--some respectfully, others even cringingly. To one of them,
a very handsome, fashionably dressed dark man, she called from a distance
with the best Parisian accent, "Comte, vous savez, il ne faut pas venir
me voir--ni aujourd'hui ni demain." The man took off his hat, without
speaking, and dropped a low bow.
"Who's that?" asked Sanin with the bad habit of asking questions
characteristic of all Russians.
"Oh, a Frenchman, there are lots of them here . . . He's dancing attendance
on me too. It's time for our coffee, though. Let's go home; you must be hungry
by this time, I should say. My better half must have got his eye-peeps open
by now."
"Better half! Eye-peeps!" Sanin repeated to himself . . . "And
speaks French so well . . . what a strange creature!"
Maria Nikolaevna was not mistaken. When she went back into the hotel with
Sanin, her "better half" or "dumpling" was already seated,
the invariable fez on his head, before a table laid for breakfast.
"I've been waiting for you!" he cried, making a sour face. "I
was on the point of having coffee without you."
"Never mind, never mind," Maria Nikolaevna responded cheerfully.
"Are you angry? That's good for you; without that you'd turn into a mummy
altogether. Here I've brought a visitor. Make haste and ring! Let us have
coffee--the best coffee--in Saxony cups on a snow-white cloth!"
She threw off her hat and gloves, and clapped her hands.
Polozov looked at her from under his brows.
"What makes you so skittish to-day, Maria Nikolaevna?" he said in
an undertone.
"That's no business of yours, Ippolit Sidoritch! Ring! Dimitri Pavlovitch,
sit down and have some coffee for the second time. Ah, how nice it is to give
orders! There's no pleasure on earth like it!"
"When you're obeyed," grumbled her husband again.
"Just so, when one's obeyed! That's why I'm so happy! Especially with
you. Isn't it so, dumpling? Ah, here's the coffee."
On the immense tray, which the waiter brought in, there lay also a playbill.
Maria Nikolaevna snatched it up at once.
"A drama!" she pronounced with indignation, "a German drama.
No matter; it's better than a German comedy. Order a box for me--baignoire--or
no . . . better the Fremden-Loge," she turned to the waiter. "Do
you hear: the Fremden-Loge it must be!"
"But if the Fremden-Loge has been already taken by his excellency, the
director of the town (seine Excellenz der Herr Stadt-Director)," the
waiter ventured to demur.
"Give his excellency ten thalers, and let the box be mine! Do you hear!"
The waiter bent his head humbly and mournfully.
"Dimitri Pavlovitch, you will go with me to the theatre? the German actors
are awful, but you will go . . . Yes? Yes? How obliging you are! Dumpling,
are you not coming?"
"You settle it," Polozov observed into the cup he had lifted to
his lips.
"Do you know what, you stay at home. You always go to sleep at the theatre,
and you don't understand much German. I'll tell you what you'd better do,
write an answer to the overseer--you remember, about our mill . . . about
the peasants' grinding. Tell him that I won't have it, and I won't and that's
all about it! There's occupation for you for the whole evening."
"All right," answered Polozov.
"Well then, that's first-rate. You're a darling. And now, gentlemen,
as we have just been speaking of my overseer, let's talk about our great business.
Come, directly the waiter has cleared the table, you shall tell me all, Dimitri
Pavlovitch, about your estate, what price you will sell it for, how much you
want paid down in advance, everything, in fact! (At last, thought Sanin, thank
God!) You have told me something about it already, you remember, you described
your garden delightfully, but dumpling wasn't here. . . . Let him hear, he
may pick a hole somewhere! I'm delighted to think that I can help you to get
married, besides, I promised you that I would go into your business after
lunch, and I always keep my promises, isn't that the truth, Ippolit Sidoritch?"
Polozov rubbed his face with his open hand. "The truth's the truth. You
don't deceive any one."
"Never! and I never will deceive any one. Well, Dimitri Pavlovitch, expound
the case as we express it in the senate."
Chapter XXXVII
SANIN proceeded to expound his case, that is to say, again, a second time,
to describe his property, not touching this time on the beauties of nature,
and now and then appealing to Polozov for confirmation of his "facts
and figures." But Polozov simply gasped and shook his head, whether in
approval or disapproval, it would have puzzled the devil, one might fancy,
to decide. However, Maria Nikolaevna stood in no need of his aid. She exhibited
commercial and administrative abilities that were really astonishing! She
was familiar with all the ins-and-outs of farming; she asked questions about
everything with great exactitude, went into every point; every word of hers
went straight to the root of the matter, and hit the nail on the head. Sanin
had not expected such a close inquiry, he had not prepared himself for it.
And this inquiry lasted for fully an hour and a half. Sanin experienced all
the sensations of the criminal on his trial, sitting on a narrow bench confronted
by a stern and penetrating judge. "Why, it's a cross-examination!"
he murmured to himself dejectedly. Maria Nikolaevna kept laughing all the
while, as though it were a joke; but Sanin felt none the more at ease for
that; and when in the course of the "cross-examination" it turned
out that he had not clearly realised the exact meaning of the words "repartition"
and "tilth," he was in a cold perspiration all over.
"Well, that's all right!" Maria Nikolaevna decided at last. "I
know your estate now . . . as well as you do. What price do you suggest per
soul?" (At that time, as every one knows, the prices of estates were
reckoned by the souls living as serfs on them.)
"Well . . . I imagine . . . I could not take less than five hundred roubles
for each," Sanin articulated with difficulty. O Pantaleone, Pantaleone,
where were you! This was when you ought to have cried again, "Barbari!"
Maria Nikolaevna turned her eyes upwards as though she were calculating.
"Well?" she said at last. "I think there's no harm in that
price. But I reserved for myself two days' grace, and you must wait till to-morrow.
I imagine we shall come to an arrangement, and then you will tell me how much
you want paid down. And now, basta cosi!" she cried, noticing Sanin was
about to make some reply. "We've spent enough time over filthy lucre
. . . a demain les affaires. Do you know what, I'll let you go now . . . (she
glanced at a little enamelled watch, stuck in her belt) . . . till three o'clock
. . . I must let you rest. Go and play roulette."
"I never play games of chance," observed Sanin.
"Really? Why, you're a paragon. Though I don't either. It's stupid throwing
away one's money when one's no chance. But go into the gambling saloon, and
look at the faces. Very comic ones there are there. There's one old woman
with a rustic headband and a moustache, simply delicious! Our prince there's
another, a good one too. A majestic figure with a nose like an eagle's, and
when he puts down a thaler, he crosses himself under his waistcoat. Read the
papers, go a walk, do what you like, in fact. But at three o'clock I expect
you . . . de pied ferme. We shall have to dine a little earlier. The theatre
among these absurd Germans begins at half-past six. She held out her hand.
"Sans rancune, n'est-ce pas?"
"Really, Maria Nikolaevna, what reason have I to be annoyed?"
"Why, because I've been tormenting you. Wait a little, you'll see. There's
worse to come," she added, fluttering her eyelids, and all her dimples
suddenly came out on her flushing cheeks. "Till we meet!"
Sanin bowed and went out. A merry laugh rang out after him, and in the looking-glass
which he was passing at that instant, the following scene was reflected: Maria
Nikolaevna had pulled her husband's fez over his eyes, and he was helplessly
struggling with both hands.
Chapter XXXVIII
OH, what a deep sigh of delight Sanin heaved, when he found himself in his
room! Indeed, Maria Nikolaevna had spoken the truth, he needed rest, rest
from all these new acquaintances, collisions, conversations, from this suffocating
atmosphere which was affecting his head and his heart, from this enigmatical,
uninvited intimacy with a woman, so alien to him! And when was all this taking
place? Almost the day after he had learnt that Gemma loved him, after he had
become betrothed to her. Why, it was sacrilege! A thousand times he mentally
asked forgiveness of his pure chaste dove, though he could not really blame
himself for anything; a thousand times over he kissed the cross she had given
him. Had he not the hope of bringing the business, for which he had come to
Wiesbaden, to a speedy and successful conclusion, he would have rushed off
headlong, back again, to sweet Frankfort, to that dear house, now his own
home, to her, to throw himself at her loved feet. . . . But there was no help
for it! The cup must be drunk to the dregs, he must dress, go to dinner, and
from there to the theatre. . . . If only she would let him go to-morrow!
One other thing confounded him, angered him; with love, with tenderness, with
grateful transport he dreamed of Gemma, of their life together, of the happiness
awaiting him in the future, and yet this strange woman, this Madame Polozov
persistently floated--no! not floated, poked herself, so Sanin with special
vindictiveness expressed it--poked herself in and faced his eyes, and he could
not rid himself of her image, could not help hearing her voice, recalling
her words, could not help being aware even of the special scent, delicate,
fresh and penetrating, like the scent of yellow lilies, that was wafted from
her garments. This lady was obviously fooling him, and trying in every way
to get over him . . . what for? what did she want? Could it be merely the
caprice of a spoiled, rich, and most likely unprincipled woman? And that husband!
What a creature he was! What were his relations with her? And why would these
questions keep coming into his head, when he, Sanin, had really no interest
whatever in either Polozov or his wife? Why could he not drive away that intrusive
image, even when he turned with his whole soul to another image, clear and
bright as God's sunshine? How, through those almost divine features, dare
those others force themselves upon him? And not only that; those other features
smiled insolently at him. Those grey, rapacious eyes, those dimples, those
snake-like tresses, how was it all that seemed to cleave to him, and to shake
it all off and fling it away, he was unable, had not the power?
Nonsense! nonsense! to-morrow it would all vanish and leave no trace. . .
. But would she let him go to-morrow?
Yes. . . All these question he put to himself, but the time was moving on
to three o'clock, and he put on a black frockcoat and after a turn in the
park, went in to the Polozovs!
He found in their drawing-room a secretary of the legation, a very tall light-haired
German, with the profile of a horse, and his hair parted down the back of
his head (at that time a new fashion), and . . . oh, wonder! whom besides?
Von Donhof, the very officer with whom he had fought a few days before! He
had not the slightest expectation of meeting him there and could not help
being taken aback. He greeted him, however.
"Are you acquainted?" asked Maria Nikolaevna who had not failed
to notice Sanin's embarrassment.
"Yes I have already had the honour," said Donhof, and bending a
little aside, in an undertone he added to Maria Nikolaevna, with a smile,
"The very man . . . your compatriot . . . the Russian . . ."
"Impossible!" she exclaimed also in an undertone; she shook her
finger at him, and at once began to bid good-bye both to him and the long
secretary, who was, to judge by every symptom, head over ears in love with
her; he positively gaped every time he looked at her. Donhof promptly took
leave with amiable docility, like a friend of the family who understands at
half a word what is expected of him; the secretary showed signs of restiveness,
but Maria Nikolaevna turned him out without any kind of ceremony.
"Get along to your sovereign mistress," she said to him (there was
at that time in Wiesbaden a certain princess di Monaco, who looked surprisingly
like a cocotte of the poorer sort); "what do you want to stay with a
plebeian like me for?"
"Really, dear madam," protested the luckless secretary, "all
the princesses in the world. . . ."
But Maria Nikolaevna was remorseless, and the secretary went away, parting
and all.
Maria Nikolaevna was dressed that day very much "to her advantage," as our grandmothers used to say. She wore a pink glace silk dress, with sleeves
a la Fontange, and a big diamond in each ear. Her eyes sparkled as much as
her diamonds; she seemed in a good humour and in high spirits.
She made Sanin sit beside her, and began talking to him about Paris, where
she was intending to go in a few days, of how sick she was of Germans, how
stupid they were when they tried to be clever, and how inappropriately clever
sometimes when they were stupid; and suddenly, point-blank, as they say--a
brule pourpoint--asked him, was it true that he had fought a duel with the
very officer who had been there just now, only a few days ago, on account
of a lady?
"How did you know that?" muttered Sanin, dumfoundered.
"The earth is full of rumours, Dimitri Pavlovitch; but anyway, I know
you were quite right, perfectly right, and behaved like a knight. Tell me,
was that lady your betrothed?"
Sanin slightly frowned . . .
"There, I won't, I won't," Maria Nikolaevna hastened to say. "You
don't like it, forgive me, I won't do it, don't be angry!" Polozov came
in from the next room with a newspaper in his hand. "What do you want?
Or is dinner ready?"
"Dinner'll be ready directly, but just see what I've read in the Northern
Bee . . . Prince Gromoboy is dead."
Maria Nikolaevna raised her head.
"Ah! I wish him the joys of Paradise! He used," she turned to Sanin,
"to fill all my rooms with camellias every February on my birthday. But
it wasn't worth spending the winter in Petersburg for that. He must have been
over seventy, I should say?" she said to her husband.
"Yes, he was. They describe his funeral in the paper. All the court were
present. And here's a poem too, of Prince Kovrizhkin's on the occasion."
"That's nice!"
"Shall I read them? The prince calls him the good man of wise counsel."
"No, don't. The good man of wise counsel? He was simply the goodman of
Tatiana Yurevna. Come to dinner. Life is for the living. Dimitri Pavlovitch,
your arm."
The dinner was, as on the day before, superb, and the meal was a very lively
one. Maria Nikolaevna knew how to tell a story . . . a rare gift in a woman,
and especially in a Russian one! She did not restrict herself in her expressions;
her countrywomen received particularly severe treatment at her hands. Sanin
was more than once set laughing by some bold and well-directed word. Above
all, Maria Nikolaevna had no patience with hypocrisy, cant, and humbug. She
discovered it almost everywhere. She, as it were, plumed herself on and boasted
of the humble surroundings in which she had begun life. She told rather queer
anecdotes of her relations in the days of her childhood, spoke of herself
as quite as much of a clodhopper as Natalya Kirilovna Narishkin. It became
apparent to Sanin that she had been through a great deal more in her time
than the majority of women of her age.
Polozov ate meditatively, drank attentively, and only occasionally cast first
on his wife, then on Sanin, his lightish, dim-looking, but, in reality, very
keen eyes.
"What a clever darling you are!" cried Maria Nikolaevna, turning
to him; "how well you carried out all my commissions in Frankfort! I
could give you a kiss on your forehead for it, but you're not very keen after
kisses."
"I'm not," responded Polozov, and he cut a pine-apple with a silver
knife.
Maria Nikolaevna looked at him and drummed with her fingers on the table.
"So our bet's on, isn't it?" she said significantly.
"Yes, it's on."
"All right. You'll lose it."
Polozov stuck out his chin. "Well, this time you mustn't be too sanguine,
Maria Nikolaevna, maybe you will lose."
"What is the bet? May I know?" asked Sanin.
"No . . . not now," answered Maria Nikolaevna, and she laughed.
It struck seven. The waiter announced that the carriage was ready. Polozov
saw his wife out, and at once waddled back to his easychair.
"Mind now! Don't forget the letter to the overseer," Maria Nikolaevna
shouted to him from the hall.
"I'll write, don't worry yourself. I'm a business-like person."
Chapter XXXIX
IN the year 1840, the theatre at Wiesbaden was a poor affair even externally,
and its company, for affected and pitiful mediocrity, for studious and vulgar
commonplaceness, not one hair's-breadth above the level, which might be regarded
up to now as the normal one in all German theatres, and which has been displayed
in perfection lately by the company in Carlsruhe, under the "illustrious"
direction of Herr Devrient. At the back of the box taken for her "Serenity
Madame von Polozov" (how the waiter devised the means of getting it,
God knows, he can hardly have really bribed the stadt-director!) was a little
room, with sofas all round it; before she went into the box Maria Nikolaevna
asked Sanin to draw up the screen that shut the box off from th e theatre.
"I don't want to be seen," she said, "or else they'll be swarming
round directly, you know." She made him sit down beside her with his
back to the house so that the box seemed to be empty. The orchestra played
the overture from the Marriage of Figaro. The curtain rose, the play began.
It was one of those numerous home-raised products in which well-read but talentless
authors, in choice, but dead language, studiously and cautiously enunciated
some "profound" or "vital and palpitating" idea, portrayed
a so-called tragic conflict, and produced dulness . . . an Asiatic dulness,
like Asiatic cholera. Maria Nikolaevna listened patiently to half an act,
but when the first lover, discovering the treachery of his mistress (he was
dressed in a cinnamon-coloured coat with "puffs" and a plush collar,
a striped waistcoat with mother-of-pearl buttons, green trousers with straps
of varnished leather, and white chamois leather gloves), when this lover pressed
both fists to his bosom, and poking his two elbows out at an acute angle,
howled like a dog, Maria Nikolaevna could not stand it.
"The humblest French actor in the humblest little provincial town acts
better and more naturally than the highest German celebrity," she cried
in indignation; and she moved away and sat down in the little room at the
back. "Come here," she said to Sanin, patting the sofa beside her.
"Let's talk."
Sanin obeyed.
Maria Nikolaevna glanced at him. "Ah, I see you're as soft as silk! Your
wife will have an easy time of it with you. That buffoon," she went on,
pointing with her fan towards the howling actor (he was acting the part of
a tutor), "reminded me of my young days; I, too, was in love with a teacher.
It was my first . . . no, my second passion. The first time I fell in love
with a young monk of the Don monastery. I was twelve years old. I only saw
him on Sundays. He used to wear a short velvet cassock, smelt of lavender
water, and as he made his way through the crowd with the censer, used to say
to the ladies in French, "Pardon, excusez," but never lifted his
eyes, and he had eyelashes like that!" Maria Nikolaevna marked off with
the nail of her middle finger quite half the length of the little finger and
showed Sanin. "My tutor was called--Monsieur Gaston! I must tell you
he was an awfully learned and very severe person, a Swiss,--and with such
an energetic face! Whiskers black as pitch, a Greek profile, and lips that
looked like cast iron! I was afraid of him! He was the only man I have ever
been afraid of in my life. He was tutor to my brother, who died . . . was
drowned. A gipsy woman has foretold a violent death for me too, but that's
all moonshine. I don't believe in it. Only fancy Ippolit Sidoritch with a
dagger!"
"One may die from something else than a dagger," observed Sanin.
"All that's moonshine! Are you superstitious? I'm not a bit. What is
to be, will be. Monsieur Gaston used to live in our house, in the room over
my head. Sometimes I'd wake up at night and hear his footstep--he used to
go to bed very late--and my heart would stand still with veneration, or some
other feeling. My father could hardly read and write himself, but he gave
us an excellent education. Do you know, I learnt Latin!"
"You? learnt Latin?"
"Yes; I did. Monsieur Gaston taught me. I read the ?neid with him. It's
a dull thing, but there are fine passages. Do you remember when Dido and ?neas
are in the forest? . . ."
"Yes, yes, I remember," Sanin answered hurriedly. He had long ago
forgotten all his Latin, and had only very faint notions about the ?neid.
Maria Nikolaevna glanced at him, as her way was, a little from one side and
looking upwards. "Don't imagine, though, that I am very learned. Mercy
on us! no; I'm not learned, and I've no talents of any sort. I scarcely know
how to write . . . really; I can't read aloud; nor play the piano, nor draw,
nor sew--nothing! That's what I am--there you have me!"
She threw out her hands. "I tell you all this," she said, "first,
so as not to hear those fools (she pointed to the stage where at that instant
the actor's place was being filled by an actress, also howling, and also with
her elbows projecting before her) and secondly, because I'm in your debt;
you told me all about yourself yesterday."
"It was your pleasure to question me," observed Sanin.
Maria Nikolaevna suddenly turned to him. "And it's not your pleasure
to know just what sort of woman I am? I can't wonder at it, though,"
she went on, leaning back again on the sofa cushions. "A man just going
to be married, and for love, and after a duel. . . . What thoughts could he
have for anything else?" Maria Nikolaevna relapsed into dreamy silence,
and began biting the handle of her fan with her big, but even, milkwhite teeth.
And Sanin felt mounting to his head again that intoxication which he had not
been able to get rid of for the last two days.
The conversation between him and Maria Nikolaevna was carried on in an undertone,
almost in a whisper, and this irritated and disturbed him the more. . . .
When would it all end?
Weak people never put an end to things themselves--they always wait for the
end.
Some one sneezed on the stage; this sneeze had been put into the play by the
author as the "comic relief" or "element"; there was certainly
no other comic element in it; and the audience made the most of it; they laughed.
This laugh, too, jarred upon Sanin.
There were moments when he actually did not know whether he was furious or
delighted, bored or amused. Oh, if Gemma could have seen him!
"It's really curious," Maria Nikolaevna began all at once. "A
man informs one and in such a calm voice, "I am going to get married";
but no one calmly says to one, "I'm going to throw myself in the water." And yet what difference is there? It's curious, really."
Annoyance got the upper hand of Sanin. "There's a great difference, Maria
Nikolaevna! It's not dreadful at all to throw oneself in the water if one
can swim; and besides . . . as to the strangeness of marriages, if you come
to that . . ."
He stopped short abruptly and bit his tongue. Maria Nikolaevna slapped her
open hand with her fan.
"Go on, Dimitri Pavlovitch, go on--I know what you were going to say.
"If it comes to that, my dear madam, Maria Nikolaevna Polozov,"
you were going to say, "anything more curious than your marriage it would
be impossible to conceive. . . . I know your husband well, from a child!" That's what you were going to say, you who can swim!"
"Excuse me," Sanin was beginning.
"Isn't it the truth? Isn't it the truth?" Maria Nikolaevna pronounced
insistently. "Come, look me in the face and tell me I was wrong!"
Sanin did not know what to do with his eyes.
"Well, if you like; it's the truth, if you absolutely insist upon it," he said at last.
Maria Nikolaevna shook her head. "Quite so, quite so. Well, and did you
ask yourself, you who can swim, what could be the reason of such a strange
. . . step on the part of a woman, not poor . . . and not a fool . . . and
not ugly? All that does not interest you, perhaps, but no matter. I'll tell
you the reason not this minute, but directly the entr'acte is over. I am in
continual uneasiness for fear some one should come in. . ."
Maria Nikolaevna had hardly uttered this last word when the outer door actually
was half opened, and into the box was thrust a head--red, oily, perspiring,
still young, but toothless; with sleek long hair, a pendent nose, huge ears
like a bat's, with gold spectacles on inquisitive dull eyes, and a pince-nez
over the spectacles. The head looked round, saw Maria Nikolaevna, gave a nasty
grin, nodded. . . . A scraggy neck craned in after it. . .
Maria Nikolaevna shook her handkerchief at it. "I'm not at home! Ich
bin nicht zu Hause, Herr P . . . . ! Ich bin nicht zu Hause. . . Ksh-sh! ksh-sh-sh!"
The head was disconcerted, gave a forced laugh, said with a sort of sob, in
imitation of Liszt, at whose feet he had once reverently grovelled, "Sehr
gut, sehr g ut!" and vanished.
"What is that object?" inquired Sanin.
"Oh, a Wiesbaden critic. A literary man or a flunkey, as you like. He
is in the pay of a local speculator here, and so is bound to praise everything
and be ecstatic over every one, though for his part he is soaked through and
through with the nastiest venom, to which he does not dare to give vent. I
am afraid he's an awful scandalmonger; he'll run at once to tell every one
I'm in the theatre. Well, what does it matter?"
The orchestra played through a waltz, the curtain floated up again. . . .
The grimacing and whimpering began again on the stage.
"Well," began Maria Nikolaevna, sinking again on to the sofa. "Since
you are here and obliged to sit with me, instead of enjoying the society of
your betrothed--don't turn away your eyes and get cross--I understand you,
and have promised already to let you go to the other end of the earth--but
now hear my confession. Do you care to know what I like more than anything?"
"Freedom," hazarded Sanin.
Maria Nikolaevna laid her hand on his hand. "Yes, Dimitri Pavlovitch,"
she said, and in her voice there was a note of something special, a sort of
unmistakable sincerity and gravity, "freedom, more than all and before
all. And don't imagine I am boasting of this--there is nothing praiseworthy
in it; only it's so and always will be so with me to the day of my death.
I suppose it must have been that I saw a great deal of slavery in my childhood
and suffered enough from it. Yes, and Monsieur Gaston, my tutor, opened my
eyes too. Now you can, perhaps, understand why I married Ippolit Sidoritch:
with him I"m free, perfectly free as air, as the wind. . . . And I knew
that before marriage; I knew that with him I should be a free Cossack!"
Maria Nikolaevna paused and flung her fan aside.
"I will tell you one thing more; I have no distaste for reflection .
. . it's amusing, and indeed our brains are given us for that; but on the
consequences of what I do I never reflect, and if I suffer I don't pity myself--not
a little bit; it's not worth it. I have a favourite saying: Cela ne tire pas
a consequence,--I don't know how to say that in Russian. And after all, what
does tire a consequence? I shan't be asked to give an account of myself here,
you see--in this world; and up there (she pointed upwards with her finger),
well, up there--let them manage as best they can. When they come to judge
me up there, I shall not be I! Are you listening to me? Aren't you bored?"
Sanin was sitting bent up. He raised his head. "I'm not at all bored,
Maria Nikolaevna, and I am listening to you with curiosity. Only I . . . confess
. . . I wonder why you say all this to me?"
Maria Nikolaevna edged a little away on the sofa.
"You wonder? . . . Are you slow to guess? Or so modest?"
Sanin lifted his head higher than before.
"I tell you all this," Maria Nikolaevna continued in an unmoved
tone, which did not, however, at all correspond with the expression of her
face, "because I like you very much; yes, don't be surprised, I'm not
joking; because since I have met you, it would be painful to me that you had
a disagreeable recollection of me . . . not disagreeable even, that I shouldn't
mind, but untrue. That's why I have made you come here, and am staying alone
with you and talking to you so openly. . . . Yes, yes, openly. I'm not telling
a lie. And observe, Dimitri Pavlovitch, I know you're in love with another
woman, that you're going to be married to her. . . . Do justice to my disinterestedness!
Though indeed it's a good opportunity for you to say in your turn: Cela ne
tire pas a consequence!"
She laughed, but her laugh suddenly broke off, and she stayed motionless,
as though her own words had suddenly struck her, and in her eyes, usually
so gay and bold, there was a gleam of something like timidity, even like sadness.
"Snake! ah, she's a snake!" Sanin was thinking meanwhile; "but
what a lovely snake!"
"Give me my opera-glass," Maria Nikolaevna said suddenly. "I
want to see whether this jeune premiere really is so ugly. Upon my word, one
might fancy the government appointed her in the interests of morality, so
that the young men might not lose their heads over her."
Sanin handed her the opera-glass, and as she took it from him, swiftly, but
hardly audibly, she snatched his hand in both of hers.
"Please don't be serious," she whispered with a smile. "Do
you know what, no one can put fetters on me, but then you see I put no fetters
on others. I love freedom, and I don't acknowledge duties--not only for myself.
Now move to one side a little, and let us listen to the play."
Maria Nikolaevna turned her opera-glass upon the stage, and Sanin proceeded
to look in the same direction, sitting beside her in the half dark of the
box, and involuntarily drinking in the warmth and fragrance of her luxurious
body, and as involuntarily turning over and over in his head all she had said
during the evening--especially during the last minutes.
Chapter XL
THE play lasted over an hour longer, but Maria Nikolaevna and Sanin soon gave
up looking at the stage. A conversation sprang up between them again, and
went on the same lines as before; only this time Sanin was less silent. Inwardly
he was angry with himself and with Maria Nikolaevna; he tried to prove to
her all the inconsistency of her "theory," as though she cared for
theories! He began arguing with her, at which she was secretly rejoiced; if
a man argues, it means that he is giving in or will give in. He had taken
the bait, was giving way, had left off keeping shyly aloof! She retorted,
laughed, agreed, mused dreamily, attacked him . . . and meanwhile his face
and her face were close together, his eyes no longer avoided her eyes. . .
. Those eyes of hers seemed to ramble, seemed to hover over his features,
and he smiled in response to them--a smile of civility, but still a smile.
It was so much gained for her that he had gone off into abstractions, that
he was discoursing upon truth in personal relations, upon duty, the sacredness
of love and marriage. . . . It is well known that these abstract propositions
serve admirably as a beginning . . . as a starting-point. . . .
People who knew Maria Nikolaevna -well used to maintain that when her strong
and vigorous personality showed signs of something soft and modest, something
almost of maidenly shamefacedness, though one wondered where she could have
got it from . . . then . . . then, things were taking a dangerous turn.
Things had apparently taken such a turn for Sanin. . . . He would have felt
contempt for himself if he could have succeeded in concentrating his attention
for one instant; but he had not time to concentrate his mind nor to despise
himself.
She wasted no time. And it all came from his being so very good-looking! One
can but exclaim, No man knows what may be his making or his undoing!
The play was over. Maria Nikolaevna asked Sanin to put on her shawl and did
not stir, while he wrapped the soft fabric round her really queenly shoulders.
Then she took his arm, went out into the corridor, and almost cried out aloud.
At the very door of the box Donhof sprang up like some apparition; while behind
his back she got a glimpse of the figure of the Wiesbaden critic. The "literary
man's" oily face was positively radiant with malignancy.
"Is it your wish, madam, that I find you your carriage?" said the
young officer addressing Maria Nikolaevna with a quiver of ill-disguised fury
in his voice.
"No, thank you," she answered . . . "my man will find it. Stop!" she added in an imperious whisper, and rapidly withdrew drawing Sanin along
with her.
"Go to the devil! Why are you staring at me?" Donhof roared suddenly
at the literary man. He had to vent his feelings upon some one!
"Sehr gut! sehr gut!" muttered the literary man, and shuffled off.
Maria Nikolaevna's footman, waiting for her in the entrance, found her carriage
in no time. She quickly took her seat in it; Sanin leapt in after her. The
doors were slammed to, and Maria Nikolaevna exploded in a burst of laughter.
"What are you laughing at?" Sanin inquired.
"Oh, excuse me, please . . . but it struck me: what if Donhof were to
have another duel with you . . . on my account . . . . wouldn't that be wonderful?"
"Are you very great friends with him?" Sanin asked.
"With him? that boy? He's one of my followers. You needn't trouble yourself
about him!"
"Oh, I'm not troubling myself at all."
Maria Nikolaevna sighed. "Ah, I know you're not. But listen, do you know
what, you're such a darling, you mustn't refuse me one last request. Remember
in three days' time I am going to Paris, and you are returning to Frankfort.
. . . Shall we ever meet again?"
"What is this request?"
"You can ride, of course?"
"Yes."
"Well, then, to-morrow morning I'll take you with me, and we'll go a
ride together out of the town. We'll have splendid horses. Then we'll come
home, wind up our business, and amen! Don't be surprised, don't tell me it's
a caprice, and I'm a madcap--all that's very likely--but simply say, I consent."
Maria Nikolaevna turned her face towards him. It was dark in the carriage,
but her eyes glittered even in the darkness.
"Very well, I consent," said Sanin with a sigh.
"Ah! You sighed!" Maria Nikolaevna mimicked him. "That means
to say, as you've begun, you must go on to the bitter end. But no, no. . .
. You're charming, you're good, and I'll keep my promise. Here's my hand,
without a glove on it, the right one, for business. Take it, and have faith
in its pressure. What sort of a woman I am, I don't know; but I'm an honest
fellow, and one can do business with me."
Sanin, without knowing very well what he was doing, lifted the hand to his
lips. Maria Nikolaevna softly took it, and was suddenly still, and did not
speak again till the carriage stopped.
She began getting out. . . . What was it? Sanin's fancy? or did he really
feel on his cheek a swift burning kiss?
"Till to-morrow!" whispered Maria Nikolaevna on the steps, in the
light of the four tapers of a candelabrum, held up on her appearance by the
gold-laced door-keeper. She kept her eyes cast down. "Till to-morrow!"
When he got back to his room, Sanin found on the table a letter from Gemma.
He felt a momentary dismay, and at once made haste to rejoice over it to disguise
his dismay from himself. It consisted of a few lines. She was delighted at
the "successful opening of negotiations," advised him to be patient,
and added that all at home were well, and were already rejoicing at the prospect
of seeing him back again. Sanin felt the letter rather stiff, he took pen
and paper, however . . . and threw it all aside again. "Why write? I
shall be back myself to-morrow . . . it's high time!"
He went to bed immediately, and tried to get to sleep as quickly as possible.
If he had stayed up and remained on his legs, he would certainly have begun
thinking about Gemma, and he was for some reason . . . ashamed to think of
her. His conscience was stirring within him. But he consoled himself with
the reflection that to-morrow it would all be over for ever, and he would
take leave for good of this feather-brained lady, and would forget all this
rotten idiocy! . . .
Weak people in their mental colloquies, eagerly make use of strong expressions.
Et puis . . . cela ne tire pas a consequence!
Chapter XLI
SUCH were Sanin's thoughts, as he went to bed; but what he thought next morning
when Maria Nikolaevna knocked impatiently at his door with the coral handle
of her riding-whip, when he saw her in the doorway, with the train of a dark-blue
riding habit over her arm, with a man's small hat on her thickly coiled curls,
with a veil thrown back over her shoulder, with a smile of invitation on her
lips, in her eyes, over all her face--what he thought then--history does not
record.
"Well? are you ready?" rang out a joyous voice.
Sanin buttoned his coat, and took his hat in silence. Maria Nikolaevna flung
him a bright look, nodded to him, and ran swiftly down the staircase. And
he ran after her.
The horses were already waiting in the street at the steps. There were three
of them, a golden chestnut thorough-bred mare, with a thin-lipped mouth, that
showed the teeth, with black prominent eyes, and legs like a stag's, rather
thin but beautifully shaped, and full of fire and spirit, for Maria Nikolaevna;
a big, powerful, rather thick-set horse, raven black all over, for Sanin;
the third horse was destined for the groom. Maria Nikolaevna leaped adroitly
on to her mare, who stamped and wheeled round, lifting her tail, and sinking
on to her haunches. But Maria Nikolaevna, who was a first-rate horse-woman,
reined her in; they had to take leave of Polozov, who in his inevitable fez
and in an open dressing-gown, came out on to the balcony, and from there waved
a batiste handkerchief, without the faintest smile, rather a frown, in fact,
on his face. Sanin too mounted his horse; Maria Nikolaevna saluted Polozov
with her whip, then gave her mare a lash with it on her arched and flat neck.
The mare reared on her hind legs, made a dash forward, moving with a smart
and shortened step, quivering in every sinew, biting the air and snorting
abruptly. Sanin rode behind, and looked at Maria Nikolaevna; her slender supple
figure, moulded by close-fitting but easy stays, swayed to and fro with self-confident
grace and skill. She turned her head and beckoned him with her eyes alone.
He came alongside of her.
"See now, how delightful it is," she said. "I tell you at the
last, before parting, you are charming, and you shan't regret it."
As she uttered those last words, she nodded her head several times as if to
confirm them and make him feel their full weight.
She seemed so happy that Sanin was simply astonished; her face even wore at
times that sedate expression which children sometimes have when they are very
. . . very much pleased.
They rode at a walking pace for the short distance to the city walls, but
then started off at a vigorous gallop along the high road. It was magnificent,
real summer weather; the wind blew in their faces, and sang and whistled sweetly
in their ears. They felt very happy; the sense of youth, health and life,
of free eager onward motion, gained possession of both; it grew stronger every
instant.
Maria Nikolaevna reined in her mare, and again went at a walking pace; Sanin
followed her example.
"This," she began with a deep blissful sigh, "this now is the
only thing worth living for. When you succeed in doing what you want to, what
seemed impossible--come, enjoy it, heart and soul, to the last drop!"
She passed her hand across her throat. "And how good and kind one feels
oneself then! I now, at this moment . . . how good I feel! I feel as if I
could embrace the whole world! No, not the whole world. . . . That man now
I couldn't." She pointed with her whip at a poorly dressed old man who
was stealing along on one side. "But I am ready to make him happy. Here,
take this," she shouted loudly in German, and she flung a net purse at
his feet. The heavy little bag (leather purses were not thought of at that
time) fell with a ring on to the road. The old man was astounded, stood still,
while Maria Nikolaevna chuckled, and put her mare into a gallop.
"Do you enjoy riding so much?" Sanin asked, as he overtook her.
Maria Nikolaevna reined her mare in once more: only in this way could she
bring her to a stop.
"I only wanted to get away from thanks. If any one thanks me, he spoils
my pleasure. You see I didn't do that for his sake, but for my own. How dare
he thank me? I didn't hear what you asked me."
"I asked . . . I wanted to know what makes you so happy to-day."
"Do you know what," said Maria Nikolaevna; either she had again
not heard Sanin's question, or she did not consider it necessary to answer
it. "I'm awfully sick of that groom, who sticks up there behind us, and
most likely does nothing but wonder when we gentlefolks are going home again.
How shall we get rid of him?" She hastily pulled a little pocketbook
out of her pocket. "Send him back to the town with a note? No . . . that
won't do. Ah! I have it! What's that in front of us? Isn't it an inn?"
Sanin looked in the direction she pointed. "Yes, I believe it is an inn."
"Well, that's first-rate. I'll tell him to stop at that inn and drink
beer till we come back."
"But what will he think?"
"What does it matter to us? Besides, he won't think at all; he'll drink
beer--that's all. Come, Sanin (it was the first time she had used his surname
alone), on, gallop!"
When they reached the inn, Maria Nikolaevna called the groom up and told him
what she wished of him. The groom, a man of English extraction and English
temperament, raised his hand to the beak of his cap without a word, jumped
off his horse, and took him by the bridle.
"Well, now we are free as the birds of the air!" cried Maria Nikolaevna.
"Where shall we go. North, south, east, or west? Look--I'm like the Hungarian
king at his coronation (she pointed her whip in each direction in turn). All
is ours! No, do you know what: see, those glorious mountains--and that forest!
Let's go there, to the mountains, to the mountains!"
"In die Berge wo die Freiheit thront!"
She turned off the high-road and galloped along a narrow untrodden track,
which certainly seemed to lead straight to the hills. Sanin galloped after
her.
Chapter XLII
THIS track soon changed into a tiny footpath, and at last disappeared altogether,
and was crossed by a stream. Sanin counselled turning back, but Maria Nikolaevna
said, "No! I want to get to the mountains! Let's go straight, as the
birds fly," and she made her mare leap the stream. Sanin leaped it too.
Beyond the stream began a wide meadow, at first dry, then wet, and at last
quite boggy; the water oozed up everywhere, and stood in pools in some places.
Maria Nikolaevna rode her mare straight through these pools on purpose, laughed,
and said, "Let's be naughty children."
"Do you know," she asked Sanin, "what is meant by pool-hunting?"
"Yes," answered Sanin.
"I had an uncle a huntsman," she went on. "I used to go out
hunting with him--in the spring. It was delicious! Here we are now, on the
pools with you. Only, I see, you're a Russian, and yet mean to marry an Italian.
Well, that's your sorrow. What's that? A stream again! Gee up!"
The horse took the leap, but Maria Nikolaevna's hat fell off her head, and
her curls tumbled loose over her shoulders. Sanin was just going to get off
his horse to pick up the hat--but she shouted to him, "Don't touch it,
I'll get it myself," bent low down from the saddle, hooked the handle
of her whip into the veil, and actually did get the hat. She put it on her
head, but did not fasten up her hair, and again darted off, positively holloaing.
Sanin dashed along beside her, by her side leaped trenches, fences, brooks,
fell in and scrambled out, flew down hill, flew up hill, and kept watching
her face. What a face it was! It was all, as it were, wide open: wide-open
eyes, eager, bright, and wild; lips, nostrils, open too, and breathing eagerly;
she looked straight before her, and it seemed as though that soul longed to
master everything it saw, the earth, the sky, the sun, the air itself; and
would complain of one thing only--that dangers were so few, and all she could
overcome. "Sanin!" she cried, "why, this is like Burger's Lenore!
Only you're not dead--eh? Not dead . . . I am alive!" She let her force
and daring have full fling. It seemed not an Amazon on a galloping horse,
but a young female centaur at full speed, half-beast and half-god, and the
sober, well-bred country seemed astounded, as it was trampled underfoot in
her wild riot!
Maria Nikolaevna at last drew up her foaming and bespattered mare; she was
staggering under her, and Sanin's powerful but heavy horse was gasping for
breath.
"Well, do you like it?" Maria Nikolaevna asked in a sort of exquisite
whisper.
"I like it!" Sanin echoed back ecstatically. And his blood was on
fire.
"This isn't all, wait a bit." She held out her hand. Her glove was
torn across.
"I told you I would lead you to the forest, to the mountains. . . . Here
they are, the mountains!" The mountains, covered with tall forest, rose
about two hundred feet from the place they had reached in their wild ride.
"Look, here is the road; let us turn into it--and forwards. Only at a
walk. We must let our horses get their breath."
They rode on. With one vigorous sweep of her arm Maria Nikolaevna flung back
her hair. Then she looked at her gloves and took them off. "My hands
will smell of leather," she said, "you won't mind that, eh?" . . . Maria Nikolaevna smiled, and Sanin smiled too. Their mad gallop together
seemed to have finally brought them together and made them friends.
"How old are you?" she asked suddenly.
"Twenty-two."
"Really? I'm twenty-two too. A nice age. Add both together and you're
still far off old age. It's hot, though. Am I very red, eh?"
"Like a poppy!"
Maria Nikolaevna rubbed her face with her handkerchief. "We've only to
get to the forest and there it will be cool. Such an old forest is like an
old friend. Have you any friends?"
Sanin thought a little. "Yes . . . only few. No real ones."
"I have; real ones--but not old ones. This is a friend too--a horse.
How carefully it carries one! Ah, but it's splendid here! Is it possible I
am going to Paris the day after to-morrow?"
"Yes . . is it possible?" Sanin chimed in.
"And you to Frankfort?"
"I am certainly going to Frankfort."
"Well, what of it? Good luck go with you! Anyway, to-day's ours . . .
ours . . . ours!"
The horses reached the forest's edge and pushed on into the forest. The broad
soft shade of the forest wrapt them round on all sides.
"Oh, but this is paradise!" cried Maria Nikolaevna. "Further,
deeper into the shade, Sanin!"
The horses moved slowly on, "deeper into the shade," slightly swaying
and snorting. The path, by which they had come in, suddenly turned off and
plunged into a rather narrow gorge. The smell of heather and bracken, of the
resin of the pines, and the decaying leaves of last year, seemed to hang,
close and drowsy, about it. Through the clefts of the big brown rocks came
strong currents of fresh air. On both sides of the path rose round hillocks
covered with green moss.
"Stop!" cried Maria Nikolaevna, "I want to sit down and rest
on this velvet. Help me to get off."
Sanin leaped off his horse and ran up to her. She leaned on both his shoulders,
sprang instantly to the ground, and seated herself on one of the mossy mounds.
He stood before her, holding both the horses' bridles in his hand.
She lifted her eyes to him. . . . "Sanin, are you able to forget?"
Sanin recollected what had happened yesterday . . . in the carriage. "What
is that--a question . . . or a reproach?"
"I have never in my life reproached any one for anything. Do you believe
in magic?"
"What?"
"In magic?--you know what is sung of in our ballads--our Russian peasant
ballads?"
"Ah! That's what you're speaking of," Sanin said slowly.
"Yes, that's it. I believe in it . . . and you will believe in it."
"Magic is sorcery . . ." Sanin repeated. "Anything in the world
is possible. I used not to believe in it--but I do now. I don't know myself."
Maria Nikolaevna thought a moment and looked about her. "I fancy this
place seems familiar to me. Look, Sanin, behind that bushy oak--is there a
red wooden cross, or not?"
Sanin moved a few steps to one side. "Yes, there is." Maria Nikolaevna
smiled. "Ah, that's good! I know where we are. We haven't got lost as
yet. What's that tapping? A woodcutter?"
Sanin looked into the thicket. "Yes . . . there's a man there chopping
up dry branches."
"I must put my hair to rights," said Maria Nikolaevna. "Else
he'll see me and be shocked." She took off her hat and began plaiting
up her long hair, silently and seriously. Sanin stood facing her . . . All
the lines of her graceful limbs could be clearly seen through the dark folds
of her habit, dotted here and there with tufts of moss.
One of the horses suddenly shook itself behind Sanin's back; he himself started
and trembled from head to foot. Everything was in confusion within him, his
nerves were strung up like harpstrings. He might well say he did not know
himself. . . . He really was bewitched. His whole being was filled full of
one thing . . . one idea, one desire. Maria Nikolaevna turned a keen look
upon him.
"Come, now everything's as it should be," she observed, putting
on her hat. "Won't you sit down? Here! No, wait a minute . . . don't
sit down! What's that?"
Over the tree-tops, over the air of the forest rolled a dull rumbling.
"Can it be thunder?"
"I think it really is thunder," answered Sanin.
"Oh, this is a treat, a real treat! That was the only thing wanting!"
The dull rumble was heard a second time, rose, and fell in a crash. "Bravo!
Bis! Do you remember I spoke of the ?neid yesterday? They too were overtaken
by a storm in the forest, you know. We must be off, though." She rose
swiftly to her feet. "Bring me my horse. . . . Give me your hand. There,
so. I'm not heavy."
She hopped like a bird into the saddle. Sanin too mounted his horse.
"Are you going home?" he asked in an unsteady voice.
"Home indeed!" she answered deliberately and picked up the reins.
"Follow me," she commanded almost roughly. She came out on to the
road and passing the red cross, rode down into a hollow, clambered up again
to a cross road, turned to the right and again up the mountainside. . . .
She obviously knew where the path led, and the path led farther and farther
into the heart of the forest. She said nothing and did not look round; she
moved imperiously in front and humbly and submissively he followed without
a spark of will in his sinking heart. Rain began to fall in spots. She quickened
her horse's pace, and he did not linger behind her. At last through the dark
green of the young firs under an overhanging grey rock, a tumbledown little
hut peeped out at him, with a low door in its wattle wall. . . . Maria Nikolaevna
made her mare push through the fir bushes, leaped off her, and appearing suddenly
at the entrance to the hut, turned to Sanin, and whispered "?neas."
Four hours later, Maria Nikolaevna and Sanin, accompanied by the groom, who
was nodding in the saddle, returned to Wiesbaden, to the hotel. Polozov met
his wife with the letter to the overseer in his hand. After staring rather
intently at her, he showed signs of some displeasure on his face, and even
muttered, "You don't mean to say you've won your bet?"
Maria Nikolaevna simply shrugged her shoulders.
The same day, two hours later, Sanin was standing in his own room before her,
like one distraught, ruined. . . .
"Where are you going, dear?" she asked him. "To Paris, or to
Frankfort?"
"I am going where you will be, and will be with you till you drive me
away," he answered with despair and pressed close to him the hands of
his sovereign. She freed her hands, laid them on his head, and clutched at
his hair with her fingers. She slowly turned over and twisted the unresisting
hair, drew herself up, her lips curled with triumph, while her eyes, wide
and clear, almost white, expressed nothing but the ruthlessness and glutted
joy of conquest. The hawk, as it clutches a captured bird, has eyes like that.
Chapter XLIII
THIS was what Dimitri Sanin remembered when in the stillness of his room turning
over his old papers he found among them a garnet cross. The events we have
described rose clearly and consecutively before his mental vision. . . . But
when he reached the moment when he addressed that humiliating prayer to Madame
Polozov, when he grovelled at her feet, when his slavery began, he averted
his gaze from the images he had evoked, he tried to recall no more, And not
that his memory failed him, oh no! he knew only too well what followed upon
that moment, but he was stifled by shame, even now, so many years after; he
dreaded that feeling of self-contempt, which he knew for certain would overwhelm
him, and like a torrent, flood all other feelings if he did not bid his memory
be still. But try as he would to turn away from these memories, he could not
stifle them entirely. He remembered the scoundrelly, tearful, lying, pitiful
letter he had sent to Gemma, that never received an answer. . . . See her
again, go back to her, after such falsehood, such treachery, no! no! he could
not, so much conscience and honesty was left in him. Moreover, he had lost
every trace of confidence in himself; every atom of self-respect; he dared
not rely on himself for anything. Sanin recollected too how he had later on--oh,
ignominy!--sent the Polozovs' footman to Frankfort for his things, what cowardly
terror he had felt, how he had had one thought only, to get away as soon as
might be to Paris--to Paris; how in obedience to Maria Nikolaevna, he had
humoured and tried to please Ippolit Sidoritch and been amiable to Donhof,
on whose finger he noticed just such an iron ring as Maria Nikolaevna had
given him!!! Then followed memories still worse, more ignominious . . . the
waiter hands him a visiting card, and on it is the name "Pantaleone Cippatola,
court singer to His Highness the Duke of Modena!" He hides from the old
man, but cannot escape meeting him in the corridor, and a face of exasperation
rises before him under an upstanding topknot of grey hair; the old eyes blaze
like red-hot coals, and he hears menacing cries and curses: "Maledizione!"
hears even the terrible words: "Codardo! Infame traditore!" Sanin
closes his eyes, shakes his head, turns away again and again, but still he
sees himself sitting in a travelling carriage on the narrow front seat. .
. In the comfortable places facing the horses sit Maria Nikolaevna and Ippolit
Sidoritch, the four horses trotting all together fly along the paved roads
of Wiesbaden to Paris! to Paris! Ippolit Sidoritch is eating a pear which
Sanin has peeled for him, while Maria Nikolaevna watches him and smiles at
him, her bondslave, that smile he knows already, the smile of the proprietor,
the slave-owner. . . But, good God, out there at the corner of the street
not far from the city walls, wasn't it Pantaleone again, and who with him?
Can it be Emilio? Yes, it was he, the enthusiastic devoted boy! Not long since
his young face had been full of reverence before his hero, his ideal, but
now his pale handsome face, so handsome that Maria Nikolaevna noticed him
and poked her head out of the carriage window, that noble face is glowing
with anger and contempt; his eyes, so like her eyes! are fastened upon Sanin,
and the tightly compressed lips part to revile him. . . .
And Pantaleone stretches out his hand and points Sanin out to Tartaglia standing
near, and Tartaglia barks at Sanin, and the very bark of the faithful dog
sounds like an unbearable reproach. . . . Hideous!
And then, the life in Paris, and all the humiliations, all the loathsome tortures
of the slave, who dare not be jealous or complain, and who is cast aside at
last, like a worn-out garment. . . .
Then the going home to his own country, the poisoned, the devastated life,
the petty interests and petty cares, bitter and fruitless regret, and as bitter
and fruitless apathy, a punishment not apparent, but of every minute, continuous,
like some trivial but incurable disease, the payment farthing by farthing
of the debt, which can never be settled. . . .
The cup was full enough.
How had the garnet cross given Sanin by Gemma existed till now, why had he
not sent it back, how had it happened that he had never come across it till
that day? A long, long while he sat deep in thought, and taught as he was
by the experience of so many years, he still could not comprehend how he could
have deserted Gemma, so tenderly and passionately loved, for a woman he did
not love at all. . . . Next day he surprised all his friends and acquaintances
by announcing that he was going abroad.
The surprise was general in society. Sanin was leaving Petersburg, in the
middle of the winter, after having only just taken and furnished a capital
flat, and having even secured seats for all the performances of the Italian
Opera, in which Madame Patti . . . Patti, herself, herself, was to take part!
His friends and acquaintances wondered; but it is not human nature as a rule
to be interested long in other people's affairs, and when Sanin set off for
abroad, none came to the railway station to see him off but a French tailor,
and he only in the hope of securing an unpaid account "pour un saute-en-barque
en velours noir tout a fait chic."
Chapter XLIV
SANIN told his friends he was going abroad, but he did not say where exactly:
the reader will readily conjecture that he made straight for Frankfort. Thanks
to the general extension of railways, on the fourth day after leaving Petersburg
he was there. He had not visited the place since 1840. The hotel, the White
Swan, was standing in its old place and still flourishing, though no longer
regarded as first class. The Zeile, the principal street of Frankfort was
little changed, but there was not only no trace of Signora Roselli's house,
the very street in which it stood had disappeared. Sanin wandered like a man
in a dream about the places once so familiar, and recognised nothing; the
old buildings had vanished; they were replaced by new streets of huge continuous
houses and fine villas; even the public garden, where that last interview
with Gemma had taken place, had so grown up and altered that Sanin wondered
if it really were the same garden. What was he to do? How and where could
he get information? Thirty years, no little thing! had passed since those
days. No one to whom he applied had even heard of the name Roselli; the hotel-keeper
advised him to have recourse to the public library, there, he told him, he
would find all the old newspapers, but what good he would get from that, the
hotel-keeper owned he didn't see. Sanin in despair made inquiries about Herr
Kluber. That name the hotel-keeper knew well, but there too no success awaited
him. The elegant shop-manager, after making much noise in the world and rising
to the position of a capitalist, had speculated, was made bankrupt, and died
in prison. . . . This piece of news did not, however, occasion Sanin the slightest
regret. He was beginning to feel that his journey had been rather precipitate.
. . . But, behold, one day, as he was turning over a Frankfort directory,
he came on the name: Von Donhof, retired major. He promptly took a carriage
and drove to the address, though why was this Von Donhof certain to be that
Donhof, and why even was the right Donhof likely to be able to tell him any
news of the Roselli family? No matter, a drowning man catches at straws.
Sanin found the retired major von Donhof at home, and in the grey-haired gentleman
who received him he recognised at once his adversary of bygone days. Donhof
knew him too, and was positively delighted to see him; he recalled to him
his young days, the escapades of his youth. Sanin heard from him that the
Roselli family had long, long ago emigrated to America, to New York; that
Gemma had married a merchant; that he, Donhof, had an acquaintance also a
merchant, who would probably know her husband's address, as he did a great
deal of business with America. Sanin begged Donhof to consult this friend,
and, to his delight, Donhof brought him the address of Gemma's husband, Mr.
Jeremy Slocum, New York, Broadway, No. 501. Only this address dated from the
year 1863.
"Let us hope," cried Donhof, "that our Frankfort belle is still
alive and has not left New York! By the way," he added, dropping his
voice, "what about that Russian lady, who was staying, do you remember,
about that time at Wiesbaden--Madame von Bo . . . von Bolozov, is she still
living?"
"No," answered Sanin, "she died long ago."
Donhof looked up, but observing that Sanin had turned away and was frowning,
he did not say another word, but took his leave.
That same day Sanin sent a letter to Madame Gemma Slocum, at New York. In
the letter he told her he was writing to her from Frankfort, where he had
come solely with the object of finding traces of her, that he was very well
aware that he was absolutely without a right to expect that she would answer
his appeal; that he had not deserved her forgiveness, and could only hope
that among happy surroundings she had long ago forgotten his existence. He
added that he had made up his mind to recall himself to her memory in consequence
of a chance circumstance which had too vividly brought back to him the images
of the past; he described his life, solitary, childless, joyless; he implored
her to understand the grounds that had induced him to address her, not to
let him carry to the grave the bitter sense of his own wrongdoing, expiated
long since by suffering, but never forgiven, and to make him happy with even
the briefest news of her life in the new world to which she had gone away. "In writing one word to me," so Sanin ended his letter, "you
will be doing a good action worthy of your noble soul, and I shall thank you
to my last breath. I am stopping here at the White Swan (he underlined those
words) and shall wait, wait till spring, for your answer."
He despatched this letter, and proceeded to wait. For six whole weeks he lived
in the hotel, scarcely leaving his room, and resolutely seeing no one. No
one could write to him from Russia nor from anywhere; and that just suited
his mood; if a letter came addressed to him he would know at once that it
was the one he was waiting for. He read from morning till evening, and not
journals, but serious books --historical works. These prolonged studies, this
stillness, this hidden life, like a snail in its shell, suited his spiritual
condition to perfection; and for this, if nothing more, thanks to Gemma! But
was she alive? Would she answer?
At last a letter came, with an American postmark, from New York, addressed
to him. The handwriting of the address on the envelope was English. . . .
He did not recognise it, and there was a pang at his heart. He could not at
once bring himself to break open the envelope. He glanced at the signature--Gemma!
The tears positively gushed from his eyes: the mere fact that she signed her
name, without a surname, was a pledge to him of reconciliation, of forgiveness!
He unfolded the thin sheet of blue notepaper: a photograph slipped out. He
made haste to pick it up--and was struck dumb with amazement: Gemma, Gemma
living, young as he had known her thirty years ago! The same eyes, the same
lips, the same form of the whole face! On the back of the photograph was written, "My daughter Mariana." The whole letter was very kind and simple.
Gemma thanked Sanin for not having hesitated to write to her, for having confidence
in her. She did not conceal from him that she had passed some painful moments
after his disappearance, but she added at once that for all that she considered--and
had always considered--her meeting him as a happy thing, seeing that it was
that meeting which had prevented her from becoming the wife of Mr. Kluber,
and in that way, though indirectly, had led to her marriage with her husband,
with whom she had now lived twenty-eight years, in perfect happiness, comfort,
and prosperity; their house was known to every one in New York. Gemma informed
Sanin that she was the mother of five children, four sons and one daughter,
a girl of eighteen, engaged to be married, and her photograph she enclosed
as she was generally considered very like her mother. The sorrowful news Gemma
kept for the end of the letter. Frau Lenore had died in New York, where she
had followed her daughter and son-in-law, but she had lived long enough to
rejoice in her children's happiness and to nurse her grandchildren. Pantaleone,
too, had meant to come out to America, but he had died on the very eve of
leaving Frankfort. "Emilio, our beloved, incomparable Emilio, died a
glorious death for the freedom of his country in Sicily, where he was one
of the "Thousand" under the leadership of the great Garibaldi; we
all bitterly lamented the loss of our priceless brother, but, even in the
midst of our tears, we were proud of him--and shall always be proud of him--and
hold his memory sacred! His lofty, disinterested soul was worthy of a martyr's
crown!" Then Gemma expressed her regret that Sanin's life had apparently
been so unsuccessful, wished him before everything peace and a tranquil spirit,
and said that she would be very glad to see him again, though she realised
how unlikely such a meeting was. . . .
We will not attempt to describe the feelings Sanin experienced as he read
this letter. For such feelings there is no satisfactory expression; they are
too deep and too strong and too vague for any word. Only music could reproduce
them.
Sanin answered at once; and as a wedding gift to the young girl, sent to "Mariana
Slocum, from an unknown friend," a garnet cross, set in a magnificent
pearl necklace. This present, costly as it was, did not ruin him; during the
thirty years that had elapsed since his first visit to Frankfort, he had succeeded
in accumulating a considerable fortune. Early in May he went back to Petersburg,
but hardly for long. It is rumoured that he is selling all his lands and preparing
to go to America.