登陆注册
5251300000052

第52章 IV(2)

I read French books, and I look out of the window which is open;I can see the spikes of my garden-fence, two or three scraggy trees, and beyond the fence the road, the fields, and beyond them a broad stretch of pine-wood. Often I admire a boy and girl, both flaxen-headed and ragged, who clamber on the fence and laugh at my baldness. In their shining little eyes I read, "Go up, go up, thou baldhead!" They are almost the only people who care nothing for my celebrity or my rank.

Visitors do not come to me every day now. I will only mention the visits of Nikolay and Pyotr Ignatyevitch. Nikolay usually comes to me on holidays, with some pretext of business, though really to see me. He arrives very much exhilarated, a thing which never occurs to him in the winter.

"What have you to tell me?" I ask, going out to him in the hall.

"Your Excellency!" he says, pressing his hand to his heart and looking at me with the ecstasy of a lover -- "your Excellency!

God be my witness! Strike me dead on the spot! _Gaudeamus egitur juventus!_"

And he greedily kisses me on the shoulder, on the sleeve, and on the buttons.

"Is everything going well?" I ask him.

"Your Excellency! So help me God! . . ."

He persists in grovelling before me for no sort of reason, and soon bores me, so I send him away to the kitchen, where they give him dinner.

Pyotr Ignatyevitch comes to see me on holidays, too, with the special object of seeing me and sharing his thoughts with me. He usually sits down near my table, modest, neat, and reasonable, and does not venture to cross his legs or put his elbows on the table. All the time, in a soft, even, little voice, in rounded bookish phrases, he tells me various, to his mind, very interesting and piquant items of news which he has read in the magazines and journals. They are all alike and may be reduced to this type: "A Frenchman has made a discovery; some one else, a German, has denounced him, proving that the discovery was made in 1870 by some American; while a third person, also a German, trumps them both by proving they both had made fools of themselves, mistaking bubbles of air for dark pigment under the microscope. Even when he wants to amuse me, Pyotr Ignatyevitch tells me things in the same lengthy, circumstantial manner as though he were defending a thesis, enumerating in detail the literary sources from which he is deriving his narrative, doing his utmost to be accurate as to the date and number of the journals and the name of every one concerned, invariably mentioning it in full -- Jean Jacques Petit, never simply Petit.

Sometimes he stays to dinner with us, and then during the whole of dinner-time he goes on telling me the same sort of piquant anecdotes, reducing every one at table to a state of dejected boredom. If Gnekker and Liza begin talking before him of fugues and counterpoint, Brahms and Bach, he drops his eyes modestly, and is overcome with embarrassment; he is ashamed that such trivial subjects should be discussed before such serious people as him and me.

In my present state of mind five minutes of him is enough to sicken me as though I had been seeing and hearing him for an eternity. I hate the poor fellow. His soft, smooth voice and bookish language exhaust me, and his stories stupefy me. . . . He cherishes the best of feelings for me, and talks to me simply in order to give me pleasure, and I repay him by looking at him as though I wanted to hypnotize him, and think, "Go, go, go! . . ."

But he is not amenable to thought-suggestion, and sits on and on and on. . . .

While he is with me I can never shake off the thought, "It's possible when I die he will be appointed to succeed me," and my poor lecture-hall presents itself to me as an oasis in which the spring is died up; and I am ungracious, silent, and surly with Pyotr Ignatyevitch, as though he were to blame for such thoughts, and not I myself. When he begins, as usual, praising up the German savants, instead of making fun of him good-humouredly, as I used to do, I mutter sullenly:

"Asses, your Germans! . . ."

That is like the late Professor Nikita Krylov, who once, when he was bathing with Pirogov at Revel and vexed at the water's being very cold, burst out with, "Scoundrels, these Germans!" I behave badly with Pyotr Ignatyevitch, and only when he is going away, and from the window I catch a glimpse of his grey hat behind the garden-fence, I want to call out and say, "Forgive me, my dear fellow!"

Dinner is even drearier than in the winter. Gnekker, whom now I hate and despise, dines with us almost every day. I used to endure his presence in silence, now I aim biting remarks at him which make my wife and daughter blush. Carried away by evil feeling, I often say things that are simply stupid, and I don't know why I say them. So on one occasion it happened that I stared a long time at Gnekker, and, _a propos_ of nothing, I fired off:

"An eagle may perchance swoop down below a cock, But never will the fowl soar upwards to the clouds. .

And the most vexatious thing is that the fowl Gnekker shows himself much cleverer than the eagle professor. Knowing that my wife and daughter are on his side, he takes up the line of meeting my gibes with condescending silence, as though to say:

"The old chap is in his dotage; what's the use of talking to him?"

Or he makes fun of me good-naturedly. It is wonderful how petty a man may become! I am capable of dreaming all dinner-time of how Gnekker will turn out to be an adventurer, how my wife and Liza will come to see their mistake, and how I will taunt them -- and such absurd thoughts at the time when I am standing with one foot in th e grave!

There are now, too, misunderstandings of which in the old days I had no idea except from hearsay. Though I am ashamed of it, I will describe one that occurred the other day after dinner.

I was sitting in my room smoking a pipe; my wife came in as usual, sat down, and began saying what a good thing it would be for me to go to Harkov now while it is warm and I have free time, and there find out what sort of person our Gnekker is.

"Very good; I will go," I assented.

同类推荐
  • 南宋元明禅林僧宝传

    南宋元明禅林僧宝传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 夜航船

    夜航船

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 道德真经疏义·赵志坚

    道德真经疏义·赵志坚

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 手杖论

    手杖论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Guardian Angel

    The Guardian Angel

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 司马懿吃三国3

    司马懿吃三国3

    热闹的三国,为何最终属于沉默的司马懿?论奸诈不及曹操,比智谋不敌诸葛亮,拼武功,关羽、赵云、吕布随便一个都能灭掉他;翻开本书,看司马懿如何靠数十年如一日的隐忍,击败三国所有英雄,独吞天下。司马懿潜伏曹操身边几十年,任由曹操差遣,他装弱、装傻、装病、装瘫,甚至装死来麻痹敌人、对手、上司、兄弟、朋友乃至家人……翻开本书,看司马懿无与伦比的沉默、隐忍和计谋。
  • 天价萌妻:帝少的心尖宠

    天价萌妻:帝少的心尖宠

    “少爷,夫人看上了海边的别墅。”“买!”“少爷,夫人看上了上市的公司。”“买!她要什么买什么!”“少爷,夫人看上了一个小鲜肉。”“买……买回来打死!”
  • 金元诗词曲300篇

    金元诗词曲300篇

    本书不仅收集了中华名诗名词,而且还涉猎了中华名赋名句;不仅涵盖了历代小品骈文散文;还囊括了诗经楚辞和禅诗。
  • 天荒

    天荒

    石油城盛产酒鬼,酒催生了人们的情欲,也催生了人类无可挽回的灾难。由此,石油城在酒的导引下,轰轰烈烈地生,也轰轰烈烈地亡,人在酒海里向自然捞取救命稻草,企图医治日渐衰微的雄性,自然的精灵飘风鸟儿则在人类残忍的虐杀中宣告了整个城市的永远阳痿。
  • 都市修仙新玄界

    都市修仙新玄界

    千年前,灵气日渐枯竭,不适修行,自此地球上修行者渐渐退出人们视野。千年后,身为养子的他,面临着入赘的困境,因反抗而遭鬼魂夺舍,最后却险得机遇,此后鲤鱼跃龙门,硬闯都市古武,并渐渐打开已消失的修行界的大门。
  • 大漠王妃

    大漠王妃

    失了父皇,她守孝三年;兄弟相残,她被迫和亲。离开家乡远嫁到大漠,离开青梅竹马成西域王妃。一个是倾国倾城的中原娇女,一个是潇洒不羁的边塞王爷,相识于战火纷飞,结合于乱世之初。王宫心计,他左拥右抱负她一片真心。山河破败,他一众铁骑夺取她故国家园。幼子早夭,他悔过不该却再不曾闻她清脆笑声。后来的后来,他的兄长霸了她的江山,毁了她的家乡……这乱世中的真情,是否真的就此结束了?
  • 想你之时花恰落

    想你之时花恰落

    人人都说萧雪墨长得小家碧玉,可那一双桃花眼的吸引力(注:可自行换词,例:勾Y)。于是美的驳论,所以美的突破驳论。人人都知贺佳云爱穿紫色长衫,但不知自家老婆的一句“单调”是推动各家富贵公子哥进入“多变紫衣”潮流的关键。都说贺公子的笑有如暖玉之暖,敢问公子“你可有冬雪化春雨之能?”“能,但只作用于爱妻。”事实则是引来春风十里,使春水初生,使春林初盛。然后在爱妻耳边蜜里调油的来一句:“不如你”
  • 悠然天下(全本)

    悠然天下(全本)

    双星齐聚,六国一统。命中注定为“双星”的悠然和潇泠被两条神秘的手链穿越到云和大陆,在六国鼎力的时代中奔走,只为那百姓的安宁和心中的梦……天作棋盘,星作子,谁人敢下?他们却道:舍我其谁!他们能否如愿成就他们的宏图霸业?最终,江山与美人,孰轻?孰重?………………………………………………………【悠然】萧慕枫:如果此生我无法再牵住你的心,那么我愿意用整个天下,来禁锢你的身。兰彦:这一世,我只想静静抓着你的手,与我共游人间,历经百世沧桑。悠然:谁是谁生命中的过客,谁又是谁生命中的轮回,我无从得知。但是如果,世上真的有那天荒地老,那么我愿意,陪着他一直走下去。【潇泠】离夕:我这一生,只愿与你,日月相连。南浔:我知,这路途虽苦,但我甘之如饴,无怨无悔。潇泠:我答应你,此生不会再让你遗世而独立,陪你一起看庭前花开花落,望天上云卷云舒。
  • 银行职场生存记

    银行职场生存记

    曝光银行职场内幕,揭露各色奇葩上司,一次次将危机转为契机,步步升级打BOSS……没有强而有力的身家背景,没有哈佛耶鲁的学历文凭,没有灵光的脑袋和厉害的人脉,俗称“三无屌丝”,人称“打不死的小强”,我是方振强。从2007年到2017年,我经历了银行业兴衰起伏的十年,眼见着原先的同事纷纷离开,或主动或被动。感受着从高薪的金饭碗到被吐槽的鸡肋餐,竞争越来越激烈,甚至开始有传言未来几年将出现银行业的破产潮。那么曾经风光的银行从业人员,尤其是像我这样的银行业小人物该如何生存、如何调整自己都将成为新的课题。
  • 重生天后要出道

    重生天后要出道

    【甜宠+娱乐圈】一朝重生,她被誉为国民女神,引起全民追星热潮。她左打白莲花,右踩极品男,不是在虐渣,就是在虐渣的路上。拍电影,票房分分钟破亿。开店,客流量天天爆满。随手救个人,都能遇上前世的商业大鳄!(1V1甜宠,触动你的少女心~)