The snow rarely falls in Krasnoiarsk.
It is a little oasis in the great winter desert of
Siberia. Reza-nov, his face turned to the window,
could see the red banks on the opposite side of the
river. The sun transformed the gilded cupolas
and crosses into dazzling points of light, and the
sky above the spires and towers, the stately square
and narrow dirty streets of the bustling little capital,
was as blue and unflecked as that which arched so
high above a land where Castilian roses grew, and
one woman among a gay and thoughtless people dreamed,
with all the passion of her splendid youth, of the
man to whom she had pledged an eternal troth.
Rezanov’s mind was clear in those last moments,
but something of the serenity and the selfishness
of death had already descended upon him. He
heard with indifference the sobs of Jon, crouched
at the foot of his bed. Tears and regrets were
a part of the general futility of life, insignificant
enough at the grand threshold of death.
No doubt that his great schemes would
die with him, and were he remembered at all it would
be as a dreamer; or as a failure because he had died
be-fore accomplishing what his brain and energy and
enthusiasm alone could force to fruition. None
realized better than he the paucity of initiative and
executive among the characteristics of the Slav.
What mattered it? He had had glimpses more than
once of the apparently illogical sequence of life,
the vanity of human effort, the wanton cruelty of
Na-ture. He had known men struck down before
in the maturity of their usefulness, cities destroyed
by earthquake or hurricane in the fairest and most
promising of their days: public men, priests,
par-ents, children, wantons, criminals, blotted out
with equal impartiality by a brutal force that would
seem to have but a casual use for the life she flung
broadcast on her planets. Man was the helpless
victim of Nature, a calf in a tiger’s paws.
If she overlooked him, or swept him contemptuously
into the class of her favorites, well and good; otherwise
he was her sport, the plaything of her idler mo-ments.
Those that cried “But why?” “What
rea-son?” “What use?” were those
that had never looked over the walls of their ego
at the great dra-matic moments in the career of Nature,
when she made immortal fame for herself at the expense
of millions of pigmies.
And if his energies, his talents,
his usefulness, were held of no account, at least
he could look back upon a past when he would have
seemed to be one of the few supreme favorites of the
forces that shaped man’s life and destiny.
Until he had started from Kronstadt four years before
on a voyage that had humiliated his proud spirit more
than once, and undermined as splendid a physique as
ever was granted to even a Russian, he had rolled
the world under his foot. With an appearance
and a personal magnetism, gifts of mind and manner
and charac-ter that would have commanded attention
amid the general flaccidity of his race and conquered
life without the great social advantages he inherited,
he had enjoyed power and pleasure to a degree that
would have spoiled a coarser nature long since.
True, the time had come when he had cared little for
any of his endowments save as a means to great ends,
when all his energies had concentrated in the determination
to live a life of the highest possible usefulness—without
which man’s span was but exist-ence—his
ambitions had cohered and been driven steadily toward
a permanent niche in history; then paled and dissolved
for an hour in the glorious vision of human happiness.
And wholly as he might realize man’s
insignifi-cance among the blind forces of nature,
he could accept it philosophically and die with his
soul uncor-roded by misanthropy, that final and uncompromis-ing
admission of failure. The misanthrope was the
supreme failure of life because he had not the in-telligence
to realize, or could not reconcile himself to, the
incomplete condition of human nature. Man was
made up of little qualities, and aspirations for great
ones. Many yielded in the struggle and sank
into impotent discontent among the small material
things of life, instead of uplifting themselves with
the picture of the inevitable future when develop-ment
had run its course, and indulgently pitying the children
of their own period who so often made life hateful
with their greed, selfishness, snobbery—
most potent obstacle to human endeavor—and
in-justice. The bad judgment of the mass!
How many careers it had balked, if not ruined, with
its poor ideals, its mean heroes, its instinctive
avoid-ance of superior qualities foreign to itself,
its con-temptible desire to be identified with a
fashion. It was this low standard of the crowd
that induced misanthropy in many otherwise brave spirits
who lacked the insight to discern the divine spark
un-derneath, the persistence, sure of reward, to
fight their way to this spark and reveal it to the
gaze of astonished and flattered humanity. Rezanov’s
very arrogance had led him to regard the mass of man-kind
as but one degree removed from the nursery; his good
nature and philosophical spirit to treat them with
an indulgence that kept sourness out of his cynicism
and inevitably recurring weariness and disgust; his
ardent imagination had consoled itself with the vision
of a future when man should live in a world made reasonable
by the triumph of ideals that now lurked half ashamed
in the high spaces of the human mind.
He looked back in wonder at the moment
of wild regret and protest—the bitterer
in its silence— when they had told him
he must die; when in the last rally of the vital forces
he had believed his will was still strong enough to
command his ravaged body, to propel his brain, still
teeming with a vast and complicated future, his heart,
still warm and insistent with the image it cherished,
on to the ulti-mates of ambition and love.
How brief it had been, that last cry of mortality,
with its accompaniment of furious wonder at his unseemly
and senseless cutting off. In the adjustment
and readjustment of political and natural forces the
world ambled on philosophically, fulfilling its inevitable
destiny.
If he had not been beyond humor, he
would have smiled at the idea that in the face of
all eternity it mattered what nation on one little
planet eventually possessed a fragment called California.
To him that fair land was empty and purposeless save
for one figure, and even of her he thought with the
terrible calm of dissolution. During these last
months of illness and isolation he had been less lonely
than at any time of his life save during those few
weeks in California, for he had lived with her incessantly
in spirit; and in that subtle imaginative communion
had pressed close to a profound and complex soul,
revealed before only in flashes to a vision astray
in the confusion of the senses. He had felt
that her response to his passion was far more vital
and enduring than dwelt in the capacity of most women;
he had appreciated her gifts of mind, her piquant
variousness that scotched monot-ony, the admirable
characteristics that would give a man repose and content
in his leisure, and subtly advance his career.
But in those long reveries, at the head of his forlorn
caravan or in the desolate months of convalescence,
he had arrived at an abso-lute understanding of what
she herself had divined while half comprehending.
Theirs was one of the few immortal
loves that reveal the rarely sounded deeps of the
soul while in its frail tenement on earth; and he
harbored not a doubt that their love was stronger
than mortality and that their ultimate union was decreed.
Mean-while, she would suffer, no one but he could
dream how completely, but her strong soul would conquer,
and she would live the life she had visioned in mo-ments
of despair; not of cloistered selfishness, but of
incomparable usefulness to her little world; and far
happier, in her eternal youthfulness of heart, in
that divine life of the imagination where he must
always be with her as she had known him briefly at
his best, than in the blunt commonplaceness of daily
existence, the routine and disillusionment of the
world. Perhaps—who knew?—he
had, after all, given her the best that man can offer
to a woman of exalted nature; instead of taking again
with his left hand what his right had bestowed; completed
the great gift of life with the priceless beacon of
death.
How unlike was life to the old Greek
tragedies! He recalled his prophetic sense of
impending hap-piness, success, triumph, as he entered
California, the rejuvenescence of his spirit in the
renewal of his wasted forces even before he loved
the woman. Every event of the past year, in spite
of the obstacles that mortal must expect, had marched
with his am-bitions and desires, and straight toward
a future that would have given him the most coveted
of all destinies, a station in history. There
had not been a hint that his brain, so meaningly and
consummately equipped, would perish in the ruins of
his body in less than a twelvemonth from that fragrant
morn-ing when he had entered the home of Concha Ar-guello
tingling with a pagan joy in mere existence, a sudden
rush of desire for the keen, wild happiness of youth—
His eyes wandered from the bright cross above
the little cemetery where he was to lie, and con-
tracted with an expression of wonder. Where had
Jon found Castilian roses in this barren land? No
man had ever been more blest in a servant, but
could even he-here- With the last triumph of
will over matter he raised his head, his keen, search-
ing gaze noting every detail of the room, bare and
unlovely save for its altar and ikons, its kneeling
priests and nuns. His eyes expanded, his nostrils
quivered. As he sank down in the embrace of that
final delusion, his unconquerably sanguine spirit
flared high before a vision of eternal and unthink-
able happiness.
So died Rezanov; and with him the hope of Rus-
sians and the hindrance of Americans in the west;
and the mortal happiness and earthly dross of the
saintliest of California’s women.