Sofya Petrovna, the wife of Lubyantsev the
notary, a handsome young woman of five-and-twenty, was walking slowly along a
track that had been cleared in the wood, with Ilyin, a lawyer who was spending
the summer in the neighbourhood. It was five o'clock in the evening.
Feathery-white masses of cloud stood overhead; patches of bright blue sky
peeped out between them. The clouds stood motionless, as though they had caught
in the tops of the tall old pine-trees. It was still and sultry.
Farther on, the track was crossed by a low
railway embankment on which a sentinel with a gun was for some reason pacing up
and down. Just beyond the embankment there was a large white church with six
domes and a rusty roof.
"I did not expect to meet you here,"
said Sofya Petrovna, looking at the ground and prodding at the last year's
leaves with the tip of her parasol, "and now I am glad we have met. I want
to speak to you seriously and once for all. I beg you, Ivan Mihalovitch, if you
really love and respect me, please make an end of this pursuit of me! You
follow me about like a shadow, you are continually looking at me not in a nice
way, making love to me, writing me strange letters, and . . . and I don't know
where it's all going to end! Why, what can come of it?"
Ilyin said nothing. Sofya Petrovna walked on a
few steps and continued:
"And this complete transformation in you
all came about in the course of two or three weeks, after five years'
friendship. I don't know you, Ivan Mihalovitch!"
Sofya Petrovna stole a glance at her
companion. Screwing up his eyes, he was looking intently at the fluffy clouds.
His face looked angry, ill-humoured, and preoccupied, like that of a man in
pain forced to listen to nonsense.
"I wonder you don't see it
yourself," Madame Lubyantsev went on, shrugging her shoulders. "You
ought to realize that it's not a very nice part you are playing. I am married;
I love and respect my husband. . . . I have a daughter . . . . Can you think
all that means nothing? Besides, as an old friend you know my attitude to
family life and my views as to the sanctity of marriage."
Ilyin cleared his throat angrily and heaved a
sigh.
"Sanctity of marriage . . ." he
muttered. "Oh, Lord!"
Yes, yes. . . . I love my husband, I respect
him; and in any case I value the peace of my home. I would rather let myself be
killed than be a cause of unhappiness to Andrey and his daughter. . . . And I
beg you, Ivan Mihalovitch, for God's sake, leave me in peace! Let us be as
good, true friends as we used to be, and give up these sighs and groans, which
really don't suit you. It's settled and over! Not a word more about it. Let us
talk of something else."
Sofya Petrovna again stole a glance at Ilyin's
face. Ilyin was looking up; he was pale, and was angrily biting his quivering
lips. She could not understand why he was angry and why he was indignant, but
his pallor touched her.
"Don't be angry; let us be friends,"
she said affectionately. "Agreed? Here's my hand."
Ilyin took her plump little hand in both of
his, squeezed it, and slowly raised it to his lips.
"I am not a schoolboy," he muttered.
"I am not in the least tempted by friendship with the woman I love."
"Enough, enough! It's settled and done
with. We have reached the seat; let us sit down."
Sofya Petrovna's soul was filled with a sweet
sense of relief: the most difficult and delicate thing had been said, the
painful question was settled and done with. Now she could breathe freely and
look Ilyin straight in the face. She looked at him, and the egoistic feeling of
the superiority of the woman over the man who loves her, agreeably flattered
her. It pleased her to see this huge, strong man, with his manly, angry face
and his big black beard -- clever, cultivated, and, people said, talented --
sit down obediently beside her and bow his head dejectedly. For two or three
minutes they sat without speaking.
"Nothing is settled or done with,"
began Ilyin. "You repeat copy-book maxims to me. 'I love and respect my
husband . . . the sanctity of marriage. . . .' I know all that without your
help, and I could tell you more, too. I tell you truthfully and honestly that I
consider the way I am behaving as criminal and immoral. What more can one say
than that? But what's the good of saying what everybody knows? Instead of
feeding nightingales with paltry words, you had much better tell me what I am
to do."
"I've told you already -- go away."
"As you know perfectly well, I have gone
away five times, and every time I turned back on the way. I can show you my
through tickets -- I've kept them all. I have not will enough to run away from
you! I am struggling. I am struggling horribly; but what the devil am I good
for if I have no backbone, if I am weak, cowardly! I can't struggle with
Nature! Do you understand? I cannot! I run away from here, and she holds on to
me and pulls me back. Contemptible, loathsome weakness!"
Ilyin flushed crimson, got up, and walked up
and down by the seat.
"I feel as cross as a dog," he
muttered, clenching his fists. "I hate and despise myself! My God! like
some depraved schoolboy, I am making love to another man's wife, writing
idiotic letters, degrading myself . . . ugh!"
Ilyin clutched at his head, grunted, and sat
down. "And then your insincerity!" he went on bitterly. "If you
do dislike my disgusting behaviour, why have you come here? What drew you here?
In my letters I only ask you for a direct, definite answer -- yes or no; but
instead of a direct answer, you contrive every day these 'chance' meetings with
me and regale me with copy-book maxims!"
Madame Lubyantsev was frightened and flushed.
She suddenly felt the awkwardness which a decent woman feels when she is
accidentally discovered undressed.
"You seem to suspect I am playing with
you," she muttered. "I have always given you a direct answer, and . .
. only today I've begged you . . ."
"Ough! as though one begged in such
cases! If you were to say straight out 'Get away,' I should have been gone long
ago; but you've never said that. You've never once given me a direct answer.
Strange indecision! Yes, indeed; either you are playing with me, or else . .
."
Ilyin leaned his head on his fists without
finishing. Sofya Petrovna began going over in her own mind the way she had
behaved from beginning to end. She remembered that not only in her actions, but
even in her secret thoughts, she had always been opposed to Ilyin's
love-making; but yet she felt there was a grain of truth in the lawyer's words.
But not knowing exactly what the truth was, she could not find answers to make
to Ilyin's complaint, however hard she thought. It was awkward to be silent,
and, shrugging her shoulders, she said:
So I am to blame, it appears."
"I don't blame you for your
insincerity," sighed Ilyin. "I did not mean that when I spoke of it.
. . . Your insincerity is natural and in the order of things. If people agreed
together and suddenly became sincere, everything would go to the devil."
Sofya Petrovna was in no mood for
philosophical reflections, but she was glad of a chance to change the
conversation, and asked:
"But why?"
"Because only savage women and animals
are sincere. Once civilization has introduced a demand for such comforts as,
for instance, feminine virtue, sincerity is out of place. . . ."
Ilyin jabbed his stick angrily into the sand.
Madame Lubyantsev listened to him and liked his conversation, though a great
deal of it she did not understand. What gratified her most was that she, an
ordinary woman, was talked to by a talented man on "intellectual"
subjects; it afforded her great pleasure, too, to watch the working of his
mobile, young face, which was still pale and angry. She failed to understand a
great deal that he said, but what was clear to her in his words was the
attractive boldness with which the modern man without hesitation or doubt
decides great questions and draws conclusive deductions.
She suddenly realized that she was admiring
him, and was alarmed.
"Forgive me, but I don't
understand," she said hurriedly. "What makes you talk of insincerity?
I repeat my request again: be my good, true friend; let me alone! I beg you
most earnestly!"
"Very good; I'll try again," sighed
Ilyin. "Glad to do my best. . . . Only I doubt whether anything will come
of my efforts. Either I shall put a bullet through my brains or take to drink
in an idiotic way. I shall come to a bad end! There's a limit to everything --
to struggles with Nature, too. Tell me, how can one struggle against madness?
If you drink wine, how are you to struggle against intoxication? What am I to
do if your image has grown into my soul, and day and night stands persistently
before my eyes, like that pine there at this moment? Come, tell me, what hard
and difficult thing can I do to get free from this abominable, miserable condition,
in which all my thoughts, desires, and dreams are no longer my own, but belong
to some demon who has taken possession of me? I love you, love you so much that
I am completely thrown out of gear; I've given up my work and all who are dear
to me; I've forgotten my God! I've never been in love like this in my
life."
Sofya Petrovna, who had not expected such a
turn to their conversation, drew away from Ilyin and looked into his face in
dismay. Tears came into his eyes, his lips were quivering, and there was an
imploring, hungry expression in his face.
"I love you!" he muttered, bringing
his eyes near her big, frightened eyes. "You are so beautiful! I am in
agony now, but I swear I would sit here all my life, suffering and looking in
your eyes. But . . . be silent, I implore you!"
Sofya Petrovna, feeling utterly disconcerted,
tried to think as quickly as possible of something to say to stop him.
"I'll go away," she decided, but before she had time to make a
movement to get up, Ilyin was on his knees before her. . . . He was clasping
her knees, gazing into her face and speaking passionately, hotly, eloquently.
In her terror and confusion she did not hear his words; for some reason now, at
this dangerous moment, while her knees were being agreeably squeezed and felt
as though they were in a warm bath, she was trying, with a sort of angry spite,
to interpret her own sensations. She was angry that instead of brimming over
with protesting virtue, she was entirely overwhelmed with weakness, apathy, and
emptiness, like a drunken man utterly reckless; only at the bottom of her soul
a remote bit of herself was malignantly taunting her: "Why don't you go?
Is this as it should be? Yes?"
Seeking for some explanation, she could not
understand how it was she did not pull away the hand to which Ilyin was
clinging like a leech, and why, like Ilyin, she hastily glanced to right and to
left to see whether any one was looking. The clouds and the pines stood
motionless, looking at them severely, like old ushers seeing mischief, but bribed
not to tell the school authorities. The sentry stood like a post on the
embankment and seemed to be looking at the seat.
"Let him look," thought Sofya
Petrovna.
"But . . . but listen," she said at
last, with despair in her voice. "What can come of this? What will be the
end of this?"
"I don't know, I don't know," he
whispered, waving off the disagreeable questions.
They heard the hoarse, discordant whistle of
the train. This cold, irrelevant sound from the everyday world of prose made
Sofya Petrovna rouse herself.
"I can't stay . . . it's time I was at
home," she said, getting up quickly. "The train is coming in. . .
Andrey is coming by it! He will want his dinner."
Sofya Petrovna turned towards the embankment
with a burning face. The engine slowly crawled by, then came the carriages. It
was not the local train, as she had supposed, but a goods train. The trucks
filed by against the background of the white church in a long string like the
days of a man's life, and it seemed as though it would never end.
But at last the train passed, and the last
carriage with the guard and a light in it had disappeared behind the trees.
Sofya Petrovna turned round sharply, and without looking at Ilyin, walked
rapidly back along the track. She had regained her self-possession. Crimson
with shame, humiliated not by Ilyin -- no, but by her own cowardice, by the
shamelessness with which she, a chaste and high-principled woman, had allowed a
man, not her husband, to hug her knees -- she had only one thought now: to get
home as quickly as possible to her villa, to her family. The lawyer could
hardly keep pace with her. Turning from the clearing into a narrow path, she
turned round and glanced at him so quickly that she saw nothing but the sand on
his knees, and waved to him to drop behind.
Reaching home, Sofya Petrovna stood in the
middle of her room for five minutes without moving, and looked first at the
window and then at her writing-table.
"You low creature!" she said,
upbraiding herself. "You low creature!"
To spite herself, she recalled in precise
detail, keeping nothing back -- she recalled that though all this time she had
been opposed to Ilyin's lovemaking, something had impelled her to seek an
interview with him; and what was more, when he was at her feet she had enjoyed
it enormously. She recalled it all without sparing herself, and now, breathless
with shame, she would have liked to slap herself in the face.
"Poor Andrey!" she said to herself,
trying as she thought of her husband to put into her face as tender an expression
as she could. "Varya, my poor little girl, doesn't know what a mother she
has! Forgive me, my dear ones! I love you so much . . . so much!"
And anxious to prove to herself that she was
still a good wife and mother, and that corruption had not yet touched that
"sanctity of marriage" of which she had spoken to Ilyin, Sofya
Petrovna ran to the kitchen and abused the cook for not having yet laid the
table for Andrey Ilyitch. She tried to picture her husband's hungry and
exhausted appearance, commiserated him aloud, and laid the table for him with
her own hands, which she had never done before. Then she found her daughter
Varya, picked her up in her arms and hugged her warmly; the child seemed to her
cold and heavy, but she was unwilling to acknowledge this to herself, and she
began explaining to the child how good, kind, and honourable her papa was.
But when Andrey Ilyitch arrived soon
afterwards she hardly greeted him. The rush of false feeling had already passed
off without proving anything to her, only irritating and exasperating her by
its falsity. She was sitting by the window, feeling miserable and cross. It is
only by being in trouble that people can understand how far from easy it is to
be the master of one's feelings and thoughts. Sofya Petrovna said afterwards
that there was a tangle within her which it was as difficult to unravel as to
count a flock of sparrows rapidly flying by. From the fact that she was not
overjoyed to see her husband, that she did not like his manner at dinner, she
concluded all of a sudden that she was beginning to hate her husband
Andrey Ilyitch, languid with hunger and
exhaustion, fell upon the sausage while waiting for the soup to be brought in,
and ate it greedily, munching noisily and moving his temples.
"My goodness!" thought Sofya
Petrovna. "I love and respect him, but . . . why does he munch so
repulsively?"
The disorder in her thoughts was no less than
the disorder in her feelings. Like all persons inexperienced in combating
unpleasant ideas, Madame Lubyantsev did her utmost not to think of her trouble,
and the harder she tried the more vividly Ilyin, the sand on his knees, the
fluffy clouds, the train, stood out in her imagination.
"And why did I go there this afternoon
like a fool?" she thought, tormenting herself. "And am I really so
weak that I cannot depend upon myself?"
Fear magnifies danger. By the time Andrey
Ilyitch was finishing the last course, she had firmly made up her mind to tell
her husband everything and to flee from danger!
"I've something serious to say to you,
Andrey," she began after dinner while her husband was taking off his coat
and boots to lie down for a nap.
"Well?"
"Let us leave this place!"
" H'm! . . . Where shall we go? It's too
soon to go back to town."
"No; for a tour or something of that
sort.
"For a tour . . ." repeated the
notary, stretching. "I dream of that myself, but where are we to get the
money, and to whom am I to leave the office?"
And thinking a little he added:
"Of course, you must be bored. Go by
yourself if you like."
Sofya Petrovna agreed, but at once reflected
that Ilyin would be delighted with the opportunity, and would go with her in
the same train, in the same compartment. . . . She thought and looked at her
husband, now satisfied but still languid. For some reason her eyes rested on
his feet -- miniature, almost feminine feet, clad in striped socks; there was a
thread standing out at the tip of each sock.
Behind the blind a bumble-bee was beating
itself against the window-pane and buzzing. Sofya Petrovna looked at the
threads on the socks, listened to the bee, and pictured how she would set off.
. . . vis--vis Ilyin would sit, day and night, never taking his eyes off her,
wrathful at his own weakness and pale with spiritual agony. He would call
himself an immoral schoolboy, would abuse her, tear his hair, but when darkness
came on and the passengers were asleep or got out at a station, he would seize
the opportunity to kneel before her and embrace her knees as he had at the seat
in the wood. . . .
She caught herself indulging in this
day-dream.
"Listen. I won't go alone," she
said. "You must come with me."
"Nonsense, Sofotchka!" sighed
Lubyantsev. "One must be sensible and not want the impossible."
"You will come when you know all about it,"
thought Sofya Petrovna.
Making up her mind to go at all costs, she
felt that she was out of danger. Little by little her ideas grew clearer; her
spirits rose and she allowed herself to think about it all, feeling that
however much she thought, however much she dreamed, she would go away. While
her husband was asleep, the evening gradually came on. She sat in the
drawing-room and played the piano. The greater liveliness out of doors, the
sound of music, but above all the thought that she was a sensible person, that
she had surmounted her difficulties, completely restored her spirits. Other
women, her appeased conscience told her, would probably have been carried off
their feet in her position, and would have lost their balance, while she had
almost died of shame, had been miserable, and was now running out of the danger
which perhaps did not exist! She was so touched by her own virtue and
determination that she even looked at herself two or three times in the
looking-glass.
When it got dark, visitors arrived. The men
sat down in the dining-room to play cards; the ladies remained in the
drawing-room and the verandah. The last to arrive was Ilyin. He was gloomy,
morose, and looked ill. He sat down in the corner of the sofa and did not move
the whole evening. Usually good-humoured and talkative, this time he remained
silent, frowned, and rubbed his eyebrows. When he had to answer some question,
he gave a forced smile with his upper lip only, and answered jerkily and
irritably. Four or five times he made some jest, but his jests sounded harsh
and cutting. It seemed to Sofya Petrovna that he was on the verge of hysterics.
Only now, sitting at the piano, she recognized fully for the first time that
this unhappy man was in deadly earnest, that his soul was sick, and that he
could find no rest. For her sake he was wasting the best days of his youth and
his career, spending the last of his money on a summer villa, abandoning his
mother and sisters, and, worst of all, wearing himself out in an agonizing
struggle with himself. From mere common humanity he ought to be treated
seriously.
She recognized all this clearly till it made
her heart ache, and if at that moment she had gone up to him and said to him,
"No," there would have been a force in her voice hard to disobey. But
she did not go up to him and did not speak -- indeed, never thought of doing
so. The pettiness and egoism of youth had never been more patent in her than
that evening. She realized that Ilyin was unhappy, and that he was sitting on
the sofa as though he were on hot coals; she felt sorry for him, but at the
same time the presence of a man who loved her to distraction, filled her soul
with triumph and a sense of her own power. She felt her youth, her beauty, and
her unassailable virtue, and, since she had decided to go away, gave herself
full licence for that evening. She flirted, laughed incessantly, sang with
peculiar feeling and gusto. Everything delighted and amused her. She was amused
at the memory of what had happened at the seat in the wood, of the sentinel who
had looked on. She was amused by her guests, by Ilyin's cutting jests, by the
pin in his cravat, which she had never noticed before. There was a red snake
with diamond eyes on the pin; this snake struck her as so amusing that she
could have kissed it on the spot.
Sofya Petrovna sang nervously, with defiant
recklessness as though half intoxicated, and she chose sad, mournful songs
which dealt with wasted hopes, the past, old age, as though in mockery of
another's grief. " 'And old age comes nearer and nearer' . . ." she
sang. And what was old age to her?
"It seems as though there is something
going wrong with me," she thought from time to time through her laughter
and singing.
The party broke up at twelve o'clock. Ilyin
was the last to leave. Sofya Petrovna was still reckless enough to accompany
him to the bottom step of the verandah. She wanted to tell him that she was
going away with her husband, and to watch the effect this news would produce on
him.
The moon was hidden behind the clouds, but it
was light enough for Sofya Petrovna to see how the wind played with the skirts
of his overcoat and with the awning of the verandah. She could see, too, how
white Ilyin was, and how he twisted his upper lip in the effort to smile.
"Sonia, Sonitchka . . . my darling
woman!" he muttered, preventing her from speaking. "My dear! my
sweet!"
In a rush of tenderness, with tears in his
voice, he showered caressing words upon her, that grew tenderer and tenderer,
and even called her "thou," as though she were his wife or mistress.
Quite unexpectedly he put one arm round her waist and with the other hand took
hold of her elbow.
"My precious! my delight!" he
whispered, kissing the nape of her neck; "be sincere; come to me at
once!"
She slipped out of his arms and raised her
head to give vent to her indignation and anger, but the indignation did not
come off, and all her vaunted virtue and chastity was only sufficient to enable
her to utter the phrase used by all ordinary women on such occasions:
"You must be mad."
"Come, let us go," Ilyin continued.
"I felt just now, as well as at the seat in the wood, that you are as
helpless as I am, Sonia. . . . You are in the same plight! You love me and are
fruitlessly trying to appease your conscience. . . ."
Seeing that she was moving away, he caught her
by her lace cuff and said rapidly:
"If not today, then tomorrow you will
have to give in! Why, then, this waste of time? My precious, darling Sonia, the
sentence is passed; why put off the execution? Why deceive yourself?"
Sofya Petrovna tore herself from him and
darted in at the door. Returning to the drawing-room, she mechanically shut the
piano, looked for a long time at the music-stand, and sat down. She could not
stand up nor think. All that was left of her excitement and recklessness was a
fearful weakness, apathy, and dreariness. Her conscience whispered to her that
she had behaved badly, foolishly, that evening, like some madcap girl -- that
she had just been embraced on the verandah, and still had an uneasy feeling in
her waist and her elbow. There was not a soul in the drawing-room; there was
only one candle burning. Madame Lubyantsev sat on the round stool before the
piano, motionless, as though expecting something. And as though taking
advantage of the darkness and her extreme lassitude, an oppressive,
overpowering desire began to assail her. Like a boa-constrictor it gripped her
limbs and her soul, and grew stronger every second, and no longer menaced her
as it had done, but stood clear before her in all its nakedness.
She sat for half an hour without stirring, not
restraining herself from thinking of Ilyin, then she got up languidly and
dragged herself to her bedroom. Andrey Ilyitch was already in bed. She sat down
by the open window and gave herself up to desire. There was no
"tangle" now in her head; all her thoughts and feelings were bent
with one accord upon a single aim. She tried to struggle against it, but
instantly gave it up. . . . She understood now how strong and relentless was
the foe. Strength and fortitude were needed to combat him, and her birth, her
education, and her life had given her nothing to fall back upon.
"Immoral wretch! Low creature!" she
nagged at herself for her weakness. "So that's what you're like!"
Her outraged sense of propriety was moved to
such indignation by this weakness that she lavished upon herself every term of
abuse she knew, and told herself many offensive and humiliating truths. So, for
instance, she told herself that she never had been moral, that she had not come
to grief before simply because she had had no opportunity, that her inward
conflict during that day had all been a farce. . . .
"And even if I have struggled," she
thought, "what sort of struggle was it? Even the woman who sells herself
struggles before she brings herself to it, and yet she sells herself. A fine
struggle! Like milk, I've turned in a day! In one day!"
She convicted herself of being tempted, not by
feeling, not by Ilyin personally, but by sensations which awaited her . . . an
idle lady, having her fling in the summer holidays, like so many!
" 'Like an unfledged bird when the mother
has been slain,' " sang a husky tenor outside the window.
"If I am to go, it's time," thought
Sofya Petrovna. Her heart suddenly began beating violently.
"Andrey!" she almost shrieked.
"Listen! we . . . we are going? Yes?"
"Yes, I've told you already: you go
alone."
"But listen," she began. "If
you don't go with me, you are in danger of losing me. I believe I am . . . in
love already."
"With whom?" asked Andrey Ilyitch.
"It can't make any difference to you who
it is!" cried Sofya Petrovna.
Andrey Ilyitch sat up with his feet out of bed
and looked wonderingly at his wife's dark figure.
"It's a fancy!" he yawned.
He did not believe her, but yet he was
frightened. After thinking a little and asking his wife several unimportant
questions, he delivered himself of his opinions on the family, on infidelity .
. . spoke listlessly for about ten minutes and got into bed again. His
moralizing produced no effect. There are a great many opinions in the world,
and a good half of them are held by people who have never been in trouble!
In spite of the late hour, summer visitors
were still walking outside. Sofya Petrovna put on a light cape, stood a little,
thought a little. . . . She still had resolution enough to say to her sleeping
husband:
"Are you asleep? I am going for a walk. .
. . Will you come with me?"
That was her last hope. Receiving no answer,
she went out. . . . It was fresh and windy. She was conscious neither of the
wind nor the darkness, but went on and on. . . . An overmastering force drove
her on, and it seemed as though, if she had stopped, it would have pushed her
in the back.
"Immoral creature!" she muttered
mechanically. "Low wretch!"
She was breathless, hot with shame, did not
feel her legs under her, but what drove her on was stronger than shame, reason,
or fear.
EmoticonEmoticon