They walked up and down the boulevard
once or twice, meeting no one they knew, and they
listened to the band which was playing as usual in
the garden. It was a very poor performance; the
music being harsh and discordant, but at a distance
it sounded languorous and sad. They only met
men and women joking and laughing, whose noisy merriment
seemed at variance with the mournful music and the
dreary evening. It irritated Yourii. At
the end of the boulevard Sanine joined them, greeting
them effusively. Yourii did not like him, so
conversation was scarcely brisk. Sanine kept
on laughing at everybody he saw. Later on they
met Ivanoff, and Sanine went off with him.
“Where are you going?” asked Novikoff.
“To treat my friend,”
replied Ivanoff, producing a bottle of vodka which
he showed to them in triumph.
Sanine laughed.
To Yourii this vodka and laughter
seemed singularly coarse and vulgar. He turned
away in disgust. Sanine observed this, but said
nothing.
“God, I thank Thee, that I am
not as other men,” exclaimed Ivanoff mockingly.
Yourii reddened, “A stale joke
like that into the bargain!” he thought, as,
shrugging his shoulders contemptuously, he walked
away.
“Novikoff, guileless Pharisee,
come along with us!” cried Ivanoff.
“What for?” “To have a drink.”
Novikoff glanced round him ruefully, but Lida was
not to be seen.
“Lida is at home, doing penance for her sins!”
laughed Sanine.
“What nonsense!” exclaimed
Novikoff testily. “I’ve got to see
a patient…”
“Who is quite able to die without
your help,” said Ivanoff. “For that
matter, we can polish off the vodka without your help,
either.”
“Suppose I get drunk?”
thought Novikoff. “All right! I’ll
come,” he said.
As they went away, Yourii could hear
at a distance Ivanoff’s gruff bass voice and
Sanine’s careless, merry laugh. He walked
once more along the boulevard. Girlish voices
called to him through the dusk. Sina Karsavina
and the school-mistress Dubova were sitting on a bench.
It was now getting dark, and their figures were hardly
discernible. They wore dark dresses, were without
hats, and carried books in their hands. Yourii
hastened to join them.
“Where have you been?” he asked.
“At the library,” replied Sina.
Without speaking, her companion moved
to make room for Yourii who would have preferred to
sit next to Sina, but, being shy, he took a seat beside
the ugly schoolteacher, Dubova.
“Why do you look so utterly
miserable?” asked Dubova, pursing up her thin,
dry lips, as was her wont.
“What makes you think that I
am miserable? On the contrary I am in excellent
spirits. Somewhat bored, perhaps.”
“Ah! that’s because you’ve nothing
to do,” said Dubova.
“Have you so much to do, then?”
“At any rate, I have not the time to weep.”
“I am not weeping, am I?”
“Well,” said Dubova, teasing him, “you’re
in the sulks.”
“My life,” replied Yourii, “has
caused me to forget what laughing is.”
This was said in such a bitter tone that there was
a sudden silence.
“A friend of mine told me that
my life is most instructive,” said Yourii after
a pause, though no one had ever made such a statement
to him.
“In what way?” asked Sina cautiously.
“As an example of how not to live.”
“Oh! do tell us all about it.
Perhaps we might profit by the lesson,” said
Dubova.
Yourii considered that his life was
an absolute failure, and that he himself was the most
luckless and wretched of men. In such a belief
there lay a certain mournful solace, and it was pleasant
to him to complain about his own life and mankind
in general. To men he never spoke of such things,
feeling instinctively that they would not believe
him, but to women, especially if they were young and
pretty, he was ever ready to talk at length about
himself. He was good-looking, and talked well,
so women always felt for him affectionate pity.
On this occasion also, if jocular at the outset, Yourii
relapsed into his usual tone; discoursing at great
length about his own life. From his own description
he appeared to be a man of extraordinary powers, cramped
and crushed by the force of circumstances, misunderstood
by his party, and one who by unlucky chance and human
folly was doomed to be just a mere student in exile
instead of a leader of the people! Like all extremely
self-satisfied persons Yourii entirely failed to perceive
that all this in no way proved his extraordinary powers,
and that men of genius were surrounded by just such
associates, and hampered by just such misfortunes.
It seemed to him that he alone was the victim of an
inexorable destiny. As he talked well and with
great vivacity and point, what he said sounded true
enough, so that girls believed him, pitied him, and
sympathized with him in his misfortunes. The band
was still playing its sad, discordant tunes, the evening
was gloomy and depressing, and they all three felt
in a melancholy mood. When Yourii ceased talking,
Dubova, meditating on her own dull, monotonous existence
and vanishing youth without joy or love, asked him
in a low voice,
“Tell me, Yourii, has the thought of suicide
never crossed your mind?”
“Why do you ask me that?”
“Oh! well, I don’t know …”
They said no more.
“You are on the committee, aren’t you?”
asked Sina eagerly.
“Yes,” replied Yourii
curtly, as if unwilling to admit the fact, but in
reality pleased to do so, because he thought that to
this charming girl he would appear weirdly interesting.
He then walked back with them to their house, and
on the way they laughed and talked much. All
depression had vanished.
“How nice he is!” said Sina, when Yourii
had gone.
Dubova shook her finger threateningly:
“Mind that you don’t fall in love with
him.”
“What an idea!” laughed Sina, though secretly
afraid.
Yourii reached home in a brighter,
more hopeful mood. He went to look at the picture
that he had begun. It produced no impression upon
him, and he lay down contentedly to sleep. That
night in dreams he had visions of fair women, radiant
and alluring.