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    Childhood, Boyhood, Youth

    Page 9
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      my choicest delight. So much store did I set upon this feeling for my

      friend that I never mentioned it to any one. Nevertheless, it must have

      annoyed him to see my admiring eyes constantly fixed upon him, or else

      he must have felt no reciprocal attraction, for he always preferred to

      play and talk with Woloda. Still, even with that I felt satisfied, and

      wished and asked for nothing better than to be ready at any time to make

      any sacrifice for him. Likewise, over and above the strange fascination

      which he exercised upon me, I always felt another sensation, namely,

      a dread of making him angry, of offending him, of displeasing him. Was

      this because his face bore such a haughty expression, or because I,

      despising my own exterior, over-rated the beautiful in others, or,

      lastly (and most probably), because it is a common sign of affection?

      At all events, I felt as much fear, of him as I did love. The first time

      that he spoke to me I was so overwhelmed with sudden happiness that I

      turned pale, then red, and could not utter a word. He had an ugly habit

      of blinking when considering anything seriously, as well as of twitching

      his nose and eyebrows. Consequently every one thought that this habit

      marred his face. Yet I thought it such a nice one that I involuntarily

      adopted it for myself, until, a few days after I had made his

      acquaintance, Grandmamma suddenly asked me whether my eyes were hurting

      me, since I was winking like an owl! Never a word of affection passed

      between us, yet he felt his power over me, and unconsciously but

      tyrannically, exercised it in all our childish intercourse. I used to

      long to tell him all that was in my heart, yet was too much afraid of

      him to be frank in any way, and, while submitting myself to his will,

      tried to appear merely careless and indifferent. Although at times his

      influence seemed irksome and intolerable, to throw it off was beyond my

      strength.

      I often think with regret of that fresh, beautiful feeling of boundless,

      disinterested love which came to an end without having ever found

      self-expression or return. It is strange how, when a child, I always

      longed to be like grown-up people, and yet how I have often longed,

      since childhood's days, for those days to come back to me! Many times,

      in my relations with Seriosha, this wish to resemble grown-up people

      put a rude check upon the love that was waiting to expand, and made me

      repress it. Not only was I afraid of kissing him, or of taking his hand

      and saying how glad I was to see him, but I even dreaded calling him

      "Seriosha" and always said "Sergius" as every one else did in our

      house. Any expression of affection would have seemed like evidence of

      childishness, and any one who indulged in it, a baby. Not having yet

      passed through those bitter experiences which enforce upon older years

      circumspection and coldness, I deprived myself of the pure delight of

      a fresh, childish instinct for the absurd purpose of trying to resemble

      grown-up people.

      I met the Iwins in the ante-room, welcomed them, and then ran to tell

      Grandmamma of their arrival with an expression as happy as though she

      were certain to be equally delighted. Then, never taking my eyes off

      Seriosha, I conducted the visitors to the drawing-room, and eagerly

      followed every movement of my favourite. When Grandmamma spoke to

      and fixed her penetrating glance upon him, I experienced that mingled

      sensation of pride and solicitude which an artist might feel when

      waiting for revered lips to pronounce a judgment upon his work.

      With Grandmamma's permission, the Iwins' young tutor, Herr Frost,

      accompanied us into the little back garden, where he seated himself

      upon a bench, arranged his legs in a tasteful attitude, rested his

      brass-knobbed cane between them, lighted a cigar, and assumed the air

      of a man well-pleased with himself. He was a German, but of a very

      different sort to our good Karl Ivanitch. In the first place, he spoke

      both Russian and French correctly, though with a hard accent Indeed,

      he enjoyed--especially among the ladies--the reputation of being a very

      accomplished fellow. In the second place, he wore a reddish moustache,

      a large gold pin set with a ruby, a black satin tie, and a very

      fashionable suit. Lastly, he was young, with a handsome, self-satisfied

      face and fine muscular legs. It was clear that he set the greatest store

      upon the latter, and thought them beyond compare, especially as regards

      the favour of the ladies. Consequently, whether sitting or standing, he

      always tried to exhibit them in the most favourable light. In short,

      he was a type of the young German-Russian whose main desire is to be

      thought perfectly gallant and gentlemanly.

      In the little garden merriment reigned. In fact, the game of "robbers"

      never went better. Yet an incident occurred which came near to spoiling

      it. Seriosha was the robber, and in pouncing upon some travellers he

      fell down and knocked his leg so badly against a tree that I thought

      the leg must be broken. Consequently, though I was the gendarme and

      therefore bound to apprehend him, I only asked him anxiously, when I

      reached him, if he had hurt himself very much. Nevertheless this threw

      him into a passion, and made him exclaim with fists clenched and in a

      voice which showed by its faltering what pain he was enduring, "Why,

      whatever is the matter? Is this playing the game properly? You ought

      to arrest me. Why on earth don't you do so?" This he repeated several

      times, and then, seeing Woloda and the elder Iwin (who were taking the

      part of the travellers) jumping and running about the path, he suddenly

      threw himself upon them with a shout and loud laughter to effect

      their capture. I cannot express my wonder and delight at this valiant

      behaviour of my hero. In spite of the severe pain, he had not only

      refrained from crying, but had repressed the least symptom of suffering

      and kept his eye fixed upon the game! Shortly after this occurrence

      another boy, Ilinka Grap, joined our party. We went upstairs, and

      Seriosha gave me an opportunity of still further appreciating and taking

      delight in his manly bravery and fortitude. This was how it was.

      Ilinka was the son of a poor foreigner who had been under certain

      obligations to my Grandpapa, and now thought it incumbent upon him to

      send his son to us as frequently as possible. Yet if he thought that the

      acquaintance would procure his son any advancement or pleasure, he was

      entirely mistaken, for not only were we anything but friendly to Ilinka,

      but it was seldom that we noticed him at all except to laugh at him. He

      was a boy of thirteen, tall and thin, with a pale, birdlike face, and

      a quiet, good-tempered expression. Though poorly dressed, he always had

      his head so thickly pomaded that we used to declare that on warm days

      it melted and ran down his neck. When I think of him now, it seems to

      me that he was a very quiet, obliging, and good-tempered boy, but at

      the time I thought him a creature so contemptible that he was not worth

      either attention or pity.

      Upstairs we set ourselves
    to astonish each other with gymnastic tours de

      force. Ilinka watched us with a faint smile of admiration, but refused

      an invitation to attempt a similar feat, saying that he had no strength.

      Seriosha was extremely captivating. His face and eyes glowed with

      laughter as he surprised us with tricks which we had never seen before.

      He jumped over three chairs put together, turned somersaults right

      across the room, and finally stood on his head on a pyramid of

      Tatistchev's dictionaries, moving his legs about with such comical

      rapidity that it was impossible not to help bursting with merriment.

      After this last trick he pondered for a moment (blinking his eyes as

      usual), and then went up to Ilinka with a very serious face.

      "Try and do that," he said. "It is not really difficult."

      Ilinka, observing that the general attention was fixed upon him,

      blushed, and said in an almost inaudible voice that he could not do the

      feat.

      "Well, what does he mean by doing nothing at all? What a girl the fellow

      is! He has just GOT to stand on his head," and Seriosha, took him by the

      hand.

      "Yes, on your head at once! This instant, this instant!" every one

      shouted as we ran upon Ilinka and dragged him to the dictionaries,

      despite his being visibly pale and frightened.

      "Leave me alone! You are tearing my jacket!" cried the unhappy victim,

      but his exclamations of despair only encouraged us the more. We were

      dying with laughter, while the green jacket was bursting at every seam.

      Woloda and the eldest Iwin took his head and placed it on the

      dictionaries, while Seriosha, and I seized his poor, thin legs (his

      struggles had stripped them upwards to the knees), and with boisterous,

      laughter held them uptight--the youngest Iwin superintending his general

      equilibrium.

      Suddenly a moment of silence occurred amid our boisterous laughter--a

      moment during which nothing was to be heard in the room but the panting

      of the miserable Ilinka. It occurred to me at that moment that, after

      all, there was nothing so very comical and pleasant in all this.

      "Now, THAT'S a boy!" cried Seriosha, giving Ilinka a smack with his

      hand. Ilinka said nothing, but made such desperate movements with his

      legs to free himself that his foot suddenly kicked Seriosha in the

      eye: with the result that, letting go of Ilinka's leg and covering the

      wounded member with one hand, Seriosha hit out at him with all his might

      with the other one. Of course Ilinka's legs slipped down as, sinking

      exhausted to the floor and half-suffocated with tears, he stammered out:

      "Why should you bully me so?"

      The poor fellow's miserable figure, with its streaming tears, ruffled

      hair, and crumpled trousers revealing dirty boots, touched us a little,

      and we stood silent and trying to smile.

      Seriosha was the first to recover himself.

      "What a girl! What a gaby!" he said, giving Ilinka a slight kick. "He

      can't take things in fun a bit. Well, get up, then."

      "You are an utter beast! That's what YOU are!" said Ilinka, turning

      miserably away and sobbing.

      "Oh, oh! Would it still kick and show temper, then?" cried Seriosha,

      seizing a dictionary and throwing it at the unfortunate boy's head.

      Apparently it never occurred to Ilinka to take refuge from the missile;

      he merely guarded his head with his hands.

      "Well, that's enough now," added Seriosha, with a forced laugh. "You

      DESERVE to be hurt if you can't take things in fun. Now let's go

      downstairs."

      I could not help looking with some compassion at the miserable creature

      on the floor as, his face buried in the dictionary, he lay there sobbing

      almost as though he were in a fit.

      "Oh, Sergius!" I said. "Why have you done this?"

      "Well, you did it too! Besides, I did not cry this afternoon when I

      knocked my leg and nearly broke it."

      "True enough," I thought. "Ilinka is a poor whining sort of a chap,

      while Seriosha is a boy--a REAL boy."

      It never occurred to my mind that possibly poor Ilinka was suffering

      far less from bodily pain than from the thought that five companions

      for whom he may have felt a genuine liking had, for no reason at all,

      combined to hurt and humiliate him.

      I cannot explain my cruelty on this occasion. Why did I not step forward

      to comfort and protect him? Where was the pitifulness which often made

      me burst into tears at the sight of a young bird fallen from its nest,

      or of a puppy being thrown over a wall, or of a chicken being killed by

      the cook for soup?

      Can it be that the better instinct in me was overshadowed by my

      affection for Seriosha and the desire to shine before so brave a boy? If

      so, how contemptible were both the affection and the desire! They alone

      form dark spots on the pages of my youthful recollections.

      XX -- PREPARATIONS FOR THE PARTY

      To judge from the extraordinary activity in the pantry, the shining

      cleanliness which imparted such a new and festal guise to certain

      articles in the salon and drawing-room which I had long known as

      anything but resplendent, and the arrival of some musicians whom Prince

      Ivan would certainly not have sent for nothing, no small amount of

      company was to be expected that evening.

      At the sound of every vehicle which chanced to pass the house I ran

      to the window, leaned my head upon my arms, and peered with impatient

      curiosity into the street.

      At last a carriage stopped at our door, and, in the full belief that

      this must be the Iwins, who had promised to come early, I at once ran

      downstairs to meet them in the hall.

      But, instead of the Iwins, I beheld from behind the figure of the

      footman who opened the door two female figures-one tall and wrapped in a

      blue cloak trimmed with marten, and the other one short and wrapped in

      a green shawl from beneath which a pair of little feet, stuck into fur

      boots, peeped forth.

      Without paying any attention to my presence in the hall (although I

      thought it my duty, on the appearance of these persons to salute them),

      the shorter one moved towards the taller, and stood silently in front of

      her. Thereupon the tall lady untied the shawl which enveloped the head

      of the little one, and unbuttoned the cloak which hid her form; until,

      by the time that the footmen had taken charge of these articles and

      removed the fur boots, there stood forth from the amorphous chrysalis

      a charming girl of twelve, dressed in a short muslin frock, white

      pantaloons, and smart black satin shoes. Around her, white neck she wore

      a narrow black velvet ribbon, while her head was covered with flaxen

      curls which so perfectly suited her beautiful face in front and her bare

      neck and shoulders behind that I, would have believed nobody, not even

      Karl Ivanitch, if he, or she had told me that they only hung so nicely

      because, ever since the morning, they had been screwed up in fragments

      of a Moscow newspaper and then warmed with a hot iron. To me it seemed

      as though she must have been born with those curls.

      The most prominent feature in her face was a pair of unusually larg
    e

      half-veiled eyes, which formed a strange, but pleasing, contrast to the

      small mouth. Her lips were closed, while her eyes looked so grave that

      the general expression of her face gave one the impression that a smile

      was never to be looked for from her: wherefore, when a smile did come,

      it was all the more pleasing.

      Trying to escape notice, I slipped through the door of the salon,

      and then thought it necessary to be seen pacing to and fro, seemingly

      engaged in thought, as though unconscious of the arrival of guests.

      BY the time, however, that the ladies had advanced to the middle of

      the salon I seemed suddenly to awake from my reverie and told them that

      Grandmamma was in the drawing room, Madame Valakhin, whose face pleased

      me extremely (especially since it bore a great resemblance to her

      daughter's), stroked my head kindly.

      Grandmamma seemed delighted to see Sonetchka. She invited her to come

      to her, put back a curl which had fallen over her brow, and looking

      earnestly at her said, "What a charming child!"

      Sonetchka blushed, smiled, and, indeed, looked so charming that I myself

      blushed as I looked at her.

      "I hope you are going to enjoy yourself here, my love," said

      Grandmamma. "Pray be as merry and dance as much as ever you can. See, we

      have two beaux for her already," she added, turning to Madame Valakhin,

      and stretching out her hand to me.

      This coupling of Sonetchka and myself pleased me so much that I blushed

      again.

      Feeling, presently, that, my embarrassment was increasing, and hearing

      the sound of carriages approaching, I thought it wise to retire. In the

      hall I encountered the Princess Kornakoff, her son, and an incredible

      number of daughters. They had all of them the same face as their mother,

     


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