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    The Gambler

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    suddenly brought up the desired coup. I could almost have died

      with joy as I received my one hundred and seventy-five gulden.

      Indeed, I have been less pleased when, in former times, I have

      won a hundred thousand gulden. Losing no time, I staked another

      hundred gulden upon the red, and won; two hundred upon the red,

      and won; four hundred upon the black, and won; eight hundred

      upon manque, and won. Thus, with the addition of the remainder

      of my original capital, I found myself possessed, within five

      minutes, of seventeen hundred gulden. Ah, at such moments one

      forgets both oneself and one's former failures! This I had

      gained by risking my very life. I had dared so to risk, and

      behold, again I was a member of mankind!

      I went and hired a room, I shut myself up in it, and sat

      counting my money until three o'clock in the morning. To think

      that when I awoke on the morrow, I was no lacquey! I decided to

      leave at once for Homburg. There I should neither have to serve

      as a footman nor to lie in prison. Half an hour before starting,

      I went and ventured a couple of stakes--no more; with the result

      that, in all, I lost fifteen hundred florins. Nevertheless, I

      proceeded to Homburg, and have now been there for a month.

      Of course, I am living in constant trepidation,playing for the

      smallest of stakes, and always looking out for

      something--calculating, standing whole days by the gaming-tables

      to watch the play--even seeing that play in my dreams--yet

      seeming, the while, to be in some way stiffening, to be growing

      caked, as it were, in mire. But I must conclude my notes, which

      I finish under the impression of a recent encounter with Mr.

      Astley. I had not seen him since we parted at Roulettenberg, and

      now we met quite by accident. At the time I was walking in the

      public gardens, and meditating upon the fact that not only had I

      still some fifty olden in my possession, but also I had fully

      paid up my hotel bill three days ago. Consequently, I was in a

      position to try my luck again at roulette; and if I won anything

      I should be able to continue my play, whereas, if I lost what I

      now possessed, I should once more have to accept a lacquey's

      place, provided that, in the alternative, I failed to discover a

      Russian family which stood in need of a tutor. Plunged in these

      reflections, I started on my daily walk through the Park and

      forest towards a neighbouring principality. Sometimes, on such

      occasions, I spent four hours on the way, and would return to

      Homburg tired and hungry; but, on this particular occasion, I had

      scarcely left the gardens for the Park when I caught sight of

      Astley seated on a bench. As soon as he perceived me, he called

      me by name, and I went and sat down beside him; but, on noticing

      that he seemed a little stiff in his manner, I hastened to

      moderate the expression of joy which the sight of him had called

      forth.

      "YOU here?" he said. "Well, I had an idea that I should meet

      you. Do not trouble to tell me anything, for I know all--yes,

      all. In fact, your whole life during the past twenty months lies

      within my knowledge."

      "How closely you watch the doings of your old friends!" I

      replied. "That does you infinite credit. But stop a moment. You

      have reminded me of something. Was it you who bailed me out of

      Roulettenberg prison when I was lying there for a debt of two

      hundred gulden? SOMEONE did so."

      "Oh dear no!--though I knew all the time that you were lying

      there."

      "Perhaps you could tell me who DID bail me out?"

      "No; I am afraid I could not."

      "What a strange thing! For I know no Russians at all here, so

      it cannot have been a Russian who befriended me. In Russia we

      Orthodox folk DO go bail for one another, but in this case I

      thought it must have been done by some English stranger who was

      not conversant with the ways of the country."

      Mr. Astley seemed to listen to me with a sort of surprise.

      Evidently he had expected to see me looking more crushed and

      broken than I was.

      "Well," he said--not very pleasantly, "I am none the less glad

      to find that you retain your old independence of spirit, as well

      as your buoyancy."

      "Which means that you are vexed at not having found me more

      abased and humiliated than I am?" I retorted with a smile.

      Astley was not quick to understand this, but presently did so

      and laughed.

      "Your remarks please me as they always did," he continued. "In

      those words I see the clever, triumphant, and, above all things,

      cynical friend of former days. Only Russians have the faculty of

      combining within themselves so many opposite qualities. Yes,

      most men love to see their best friend in abasement; for

      generally it is on such abasement that friendship is founded.

      All thinking persons know that ancient truth. Yet, on the

      present occasion, I assure you, I am sincerely glad to see that

      you are NOT cast down. Tell me, are you never going to give up

      gambling?"

      "Damn the gambling! Yes, I should certainly have given it up,

      were it not that--"

      "That you are losing? I thought so. You need not tell me any

      more. I know how things stand, for you have said that last in

      despair, and therefore, truthfully. Have you no other employment

      than gambling?"

      "No; none whatever."

      Astley gave me a searching glance. At that time it was ages

      since I had last looked at a paper or turned the pages of a book.

      "You are growing blase," he said. "You have not only renounced

      life, with its interests and social ties, but the duties of a citizen

      and a man; you have not only renounced the friends whom I know

      you to have had, and every aim in life but that of winning

      money; but you have also renounced your memory. Though I can

      remember you in the strong, ardent period of your life, I feel

      persuaded that you have now forgotten every better feeling of

      that period--that your present dreams and aspirations of

      subsistence do not rise above pair, impair rouge, noir, the

      twelve middle numbers, and so forth."

      "Enough, Mr. Astley!" I cried with some irritation--almost in

      anger. "Kindly do not recall to me any more recollections, for

      I can remember things for myself. Only for a time have I put

      them out of my head. Only until I shall have rehabilitated

      myself, am I keeping my memory dulled. When that hour shall come,

      you will see me arise from the dead."

      "Then you will have to be here another ten years," he replied.

      "Should I then be alive, I will remind you--here, on this very

      bench--of what I have just said. In fact, I will bet you a wager

      that I shall do so."

      "Say no more," I interrupted impatiently. "And to show you

      that I have not wholly forgotten the past, may I enquire where

      Mlle. Polina is? If it was not you who bailed me out of prison,

      it must have been she. Yet never have I heard a word concerning

      her."

      "No, I do not think it was she. At the present mome
    nt she is in

      Switzerland, and you will do me a favour by ceasing to ask me

      these questions about her." Astley said this with a firm, and

      even an angry, air.

      "Which means that she has dealt you a serious wound?" I burst

      out with an involuntary sneer.

      "Mlle. Polina," he continued, "Is the best of all possible

      living beings; but, I repeat, that I shall thank you to cease

      questioning me about her. You never really knew her, and her

      name on your lips is an offence to my moral feeling."

      "Indeed? On what subject, then, have I a better right to speak

      to you than on this? With it are bound up all your recollections

      and mine. However, do not be alarmed: I have no wish to probe

      too far into your private, your secret affairs. My interest in

      Mlle. Polina does not extend beyond her outward circumstances

      and surroundings. About them you could tell me in two words."

      "Well, on condition that the matter shall end there, I will

      tell you that for a long time Mlle. Polina was ill, and still is

      so. My mother and sister entertained her for a while at their

      home in the north of England, and thereafter Mlle. Polina's

      grandmother (you remember the mad old woman?) died, and left

      Mlle. Polina a personal legacy of seven thousand pounds

      sterling. That was about six months ago, and now Mlle. is

      travelling with my sister's family-- my sister having since

      married. Mlle.'s little brother and sister also benefited by the

      Grandmother's will, and are now being educated in London. As for

      the General, he died in Paris last month, of a stroke. Mlle.

      Blanche did well by him, for she succeeded in having transferred

      to herself all that he received from the Grandmother. That, I

      think, concludes all that I have to tell."

      "And De Griers? Is he too travelling in Switzerland?"

      "No; nor do I know where he is. Also I warn you once more that

      you had better avoid such hints and ignoble suppositions;

      otherwise you will assuredly have to reckon with me."

      "What? In spite of our old friendship?"

      "Yes, in spite of our old friendship."

      "Then I beg your pardon a thousand times, Mr. Astley. I meant

      nothing offensive to Mlle. Polina, for I have nothing of which

      to accuse her. Moreover, the question of there being anything

      between this Frenchman and this Russian lady is not one which

      you and I need discuss, nor even attempt to understand."

      "If," replied Astley, "you do not care to hear their names

      coupled together, may I ask you what you mean by the expressions

      'this Frenchman,' 'this Russian lady,' and 'there being

      anything between them'? Why do you call them so particularly a

      'Frenchman' and a 'Russian lady'?"

      "Ah, I see you are interested, Mr. Astley. But it is a long,

      long story, and calls for a lengthy preface. At the same time,

      the question is an important one, however ridiculous it may seem

      at the first glance. A Frenchman, Mr. Astley, is merely a fine

      figure of a man. With this you, as a Britisher, may not agree.

      With it I also, as a Russian, may not agree--out of envy. Yet

      possibly our good ladies are of another opinion. For instance,

      one may look upon Racine as a broken-down, hobbledehoy, perfumed

      individual--one may even be unable to read him; and I too may

      think him the same, as well as, in some respects, a subject for

      ridicule. Yet about him, Mr. Astley, there is a certain charm,

      and, above all things, he is a great poet--though one might like

      to deny it. Yes, the Frenchman, the Parisian, as a national

      figure, was in process of developing into a figure of elegance

      before we Russians had even ceased to be bears. The Revolution

      bequeathed to the French nobility its heritage, and now every

      whippersnapper of a Parisian may possess manners, methods of

      expression, and even thoughts that are above reproach in form,

      while all the time he himself may share in that form neither in

      initiative nor in intellect nor in soul--his manners, and the

      rest, having come to him through inheritance. Yes, taken by

      himself, the Frenchman is frequently a fool of fools and a

      villain of villains.

      Per contra, there is no one in the world

      more worthy of confidence and respect than this young Russian

      lady. De Griers might so mask his face and play a part as easily

      to overcome her heart, for he has an imposing figure, Mr.

      Astley, and this young lady might easily take that figure for

      his real self--for the natural form of his heart and soul--instead

      of the mere cloak with which heredity has dowered him. And even

      though it may offend you, I feel bound to say that the majority

      also of English people are uncouth and unrefined, whereas we

      Russian folk can recognise beauty wherever we see it, and are

      always eager to cultivate the same. But to distinguish beauty of

      soul and personal originality there is needed far more

      independence and freedom than is possessed by our women,

      especially by our younger ladies. At all events, they need more

      EXPERIENCE. For instance, this Mlle. Polina--pardon me, but the

      name has passed my lips, and I cannot well recall it--is taking a

      very long time to make up her mind to prefer you to Monsieur de

      Griers. She may respect you, she may become your friend, she may

      open out her heart to you; yet over that heart there will be

      reigning that loathsome villain, that mean and petty usurer, De

      Griers. This will be due to obstinacy and self-love--to the fact

      that De Griers once appeared to her in the transfigured guise of

      a marquis, of a disenchanted and ruined liberal who was doing

      his best to help her family and the frivolous old General; and,

      although these transactions of his have since been exposed, you

      will find that the exposure has made no impression upon her

      mind. Only give her the De Griers of former days, and she will

      ask of you no more. The more she may detest the present De

      Griers, the more will she lament the De Griers of the past--even

      though the latter never existed but in her own imagination. You

      are a sugar refiner, Mr. Astley, are you not?"

      "Yes, I belong to the well-known firm of Lovell and Co."

      "Then see here. On the one hand, you are a sugar refiner,

      while, on the other hand, you are an Apollo Belvedere. But the

      two characters do not mix with one another. I, again, am not

      even a sugar refiner; I am a mere roulette gambler who has also

      served as a lacquey. Of this fact Mlle. Polina is probably well

      aware, since she appears to have an excellent force of police at

      her disposal."

      "You are saying this because you are feeling bitter," said

      Astley with cold indifference. "Yet there is not the least

      originality in your words."

      "I agree. But therein lies the horror of it all--that, however

      mean and farcical my accusations may be, they are none the less

      TRUE. But I am only wasting words."

      "Yes, you are, for you are only talking nonsense! exclaimed my

      companion--his voice now trembling and his eyes flashing fire.

      "Are yo
    u aware," he continued, "that wretched, ignoble, petty,

      unfortunate man though you are, it was at HER request I came to

      Homburg, in order to see you, and to have a long, serious talk

      with you, and to report to her your feelings and thoughts and

      hopes--yes, and your recollections of her, too?"

      "Indeed? Is that really so?" I cried--the tears beginning to

      well from my eyes. Never before had this happened.

      "Yes, poor unfortunate," continued Astley. "She DID love you;

      and I may tell you this now for the reason that now you are

      utterly lost. Even if I were also to tell you that she still

      loves you, you would none the less have to remain where you are.

      Yes, you have ruined yourself beyond redemption. Once upon a

      time you had a certain amount of talent, and you were of a

      lively disposition, and your good looks were not to be despised.

      You might even have been useful to your country, which needs men

      like you. Yet you remained here, and your life is now over. I am

      not blaming you for this-- in my view all Russians resemble you,

      or are inclined to do so. If it is not roulette, then it is

      something else. The exceptions are very rare. Nor are you the

      first to learn what a taskmaster is yours. For roulette is not

      exclusively a Russian game. Hitherto, you have honourably preferred

      to serve as a lacquey rather than to act as a thief; but what the

      future may have in store for you I tremble to think. Now good-bye.

      You are in want of money, I suppose? Then take these ten louis d'or.

      More I shall not give you, for you would only gamble it away. Take

      care of these coins, and farewell. Once more, TAKE CARE of them."

      "No, Mr. Astley. After all that has been said I--"

      "TAKE CARE of them!" repeated my friend. "I am certain you

      are still a gentleman, and therefore I give you the money as one

      gentleman may give money to another. Also, if I could be certain

      that you would leave both Homburg and the gaming-tables, and

      return to your own country, I would give you a thousand pounds

      down to start life afresh; but, I give you ten louis d'or instead

      of a thousand pounds for the reason that at the present time a

      thousand pounds and ten louis d'or will be all the same to

      you--you will lose the one as readily as you will the other. Take

      the money, therefore, and good-bye."

      "Yes, I WILL take it if at the same time you will embrace me."

      "With pleasure."

      So we parted--on terms of sincere affection.

      ...............

      But he was wrong. If I was hard and undiscerning as regards

      Polina and De Griers, HE was hard and undiscerning as regards

      Russian people generally. Of myself I say nothing. Yet--yet words

      are only words. I need to ACT. Above all things I need to think

      of Switzerland. Tomorrow, tomorrow-- Ah, but if only I could

      set things right tomorrow, and be born again, and rise again

      from the dead! But no--I cannot. Yet I must show her what I can

      do. Even if she should do no more than learn that I can still

      play the man, it would be worth it. Today it is too late, but

      TOMORROW...

      Yet I have a presentiment that things can never be otherwise. I

      have got fifteen louis d'or in my possession, although I began

      with fifteen gulden. If I were to play carefully at the

      start--But no, no! Surely I am not such a fool as that? Yet WHY

      should I not rise from the dead? I should require at first but

      to go cautiously and patiently and the rest would follow. I

      should require but to put a check upon my nature for one hour,

      and my fortunes would be changed entirely. Yes, my nature is my

      weak point. I have only to remember what happened to me some

      months ago at Roulettenberg, before my final ruin. What a

      notable instance that was of my capacity for resolution! On the

      occasion in question I had lost everything--everything; yet, just

      as I was leaving the Casino, I heard another gulden give a

      rattle in my pocket! "Perhaps I shall need it for a meal," I

      thought to myself; but a hundred paces further on, I changed my

      mind, and returned. That gulden I staked upon manque--and there

     


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