CHAPTER VII
THERE IS NO DEATH
Just as Tanya Kovalchuk had thought
all her life only of others and never of herself,
so now she suffered and grieved painfully, but only
for her comrades. She pictured death, only as
awaiting them, as something tormenting only to Sergey
Golovin, to Musya, to the others-as for herself, it
did not concern her.
As a recompense for her firmness and
restraint in the courtroom she wept for long hours,
as old women who have experienced great misery, or
as very sympathetic and kind-hearted young people know
how to weep. And the fear that perhaps Seryozha
was without tobacco or Werner without the strong tea
to which he was accustomed, in addition to the fact
that they were to die, caused her no less pain than
the idea of the execution itself. Death was something
inevitable and even unimportant, of which it was not
worth while to think; but for a man in prison, before
his execution, to be left without tobacco-that was
altogether unbearable. She recalled and went over
in her mind all the pleasant details of their life
together, and then she grew faint with fear when she
pictured to herself the meeting between Sergey and
his parents.
She felt particularly sorry for Musya.
It had long seemed to her that Musya loved Werner,
and although this was not a fact, she still dreamed
of something good and bright for both of them.
When she had been free, Musya had worn a silver ring,
on which was the design of a skull, bones, and a crown
of thorns about them. Tanya Kovalchuk had often
looked upon the ring as a symbol of doom, and she would
ask Musya, now in jest, now in earnest, to remove
the ring.
“Make me a present of it,” she had begged.
“No, Tanechka, I will not give it to you.
But perhaps you will soon have another ring upon your
finger.”
For some reason or other they all
in turn had thought that she would doubtless soon
marry, and this had offended her-she wanted no husband.
And recalling these half-jesting conversations with
Musya, and the fact that now Musya was actually condemned
to death, she choked with tears in her maternal pity.
And each time the clock struck she raised her tear-stained
face and listened-how were they in the other cells
receiving this drawn-out, persistent call of death?
But Musya was happy.
With her hands folded behind her back,
dressed in a prisoner’s garb which was much
too large for her, and which made her look very much
like a man-like a stripling dressed in some one else’s
clothes-she paced her cell evenly and tirelessly.
The sleeves of the coat were too long for her, and
she turned them up, and her thin, almost childish,
emaciated hands peeped out of the wide holes like a
beautiful flower out of a coarse earthen jug.
The rough material of the coat rubbed her thin white
neck, and sometimes Musya would free her throat with
both hands and would cautiously feel the spot where
the irritated skin was red and smarted.
Musya paced the cell, and, blushing
in agitation, she imagined that she was justifying
herself before the people. She tried to justify
herself for the fact that she, who was so young, so
insignificant, who had done so little, and who was
not at all a heroine, was yet to undergo the same
honorable and beautiful death by which real heroes
and martyrs had died before her. With unshakable
faith in human kindness, in their compassion, in their
love, she pictured to herself how people were now
agitated on her account, how they suffered, how they
pitied her, and she felt so ashamed that she blushed,
as if, by dying upon the scaffold, she had committed
some tremendous, awkward blunder.
At the last meeting with their counsel
she had asked him to bring her poison, but suddenly
she had changed her mind. What if he and the
others, she thought, should consider that she was doing
it merely to become conspicuous, or out of cowardice,
that instead of dying modestly and unnoticed, she
was attempting to glorify herself. And she added
hastily:
“No, it isn’t necessary.”
And now she desired but one thing-to
be able to explain to people, to prove to them so
that they should have not the slightest doubt that
she was not at all a heroine, that it was not terrible
to die, that they should not feel sorry for her, nor
trouble themselves about her. She wished to be
able to explain to them that she was not at all to
blame that she, who was so young and so insignificant,
was to undergo such a martyr’s death, and that
so much trouble should be made on her account.
Like a person who is actually accused
of a crime, Musya sought justification. She endeavored
to find something that would at least make her sacrifice
more momentous, which might give it real value.
She reasoned:
“Of course, I am young and could
have lived for a long time. But—”
And as a candle darkens in the glare
of the rising sun, so her youth and her life seemed
dull and dark compared to that great and resplendent
radiance which would shine above her simple head.
There was no justification.
But perhaps that peculiar something
which she bore in her soul-boundless love, boundless
eagerness to do great deeds, her boundless contempt
for herself-was a justification in itself. She
felt that she was really not to blame that she was
hindered from doing the things she could have done,
which she had wished to do-that she had been smitten
upon the threshold of the temple, at the foot of the
altar.
But if that were so, if a person is
appreciated not only for what he has done, but also
for what he had intended to do-then-then she was worthy
of the crown of the martyr!
“Is it possible?” thought
Musya bashfully. “Is it possible that I
am worthy of it? That I deserve that people should
weep for me, should be agitated over my fate, over
such a little and insignificant girl?”
And she was seized with sudden joy.
There were no doubts, no hesitations-she was received
into their midst-she entered justified the ranks of
those noble people who always ascend to heaven through
fires, tortures and executions. Bright peace and
tranquillity and endless, calmly radiant happiness!
It was as if she had already departed from earth and
was nearing the unknown sun of truth and life, and
was in-corporeally soaring in its light.
“And that is-Death? That
is not Death!” thought Musya blissfully.
And if scientists, philosophers and
hangmen from the world over should come to her cell,
spreading before her books, scalpels, axes and nooses,
and were to attempt to prove to her that Death existed,
that a human being dies and is killed, that there
is no immortality, they would only surprise her.
How could there be no deathlessness, since she was
already deathless? Of what other deathlessness,
of what other death, could there be a question, since
she was already dead and immortal, alive in death,
as she had been dead in life?
And if a coffin were brought into
her cell with her own decomposing body in it, and
she were told:
“Look! That is you!”
She would look and would answer:
“No, it is not I.”
And if they should attempt to convince
her, frightening her by the ominous sight of her own
decomposed body, that it was she -she, Musya, would
answer with a smile:
“No. You think that it
is I, but it isn’t. I am the one you are
speaking to; how can I be the other one?”
“But you will die and become like that.”
“No, I will not die.”
“You will be executed. Here is the noose.”
“I will be executed, but I will
not die. How can I die, when I am already-now-
immortal?”
And the scientists and philosophers
and hangmen would retreat, speaking -with a shudder:
“Do not touch this place.
It is holy.” What else was Musya thinking
about? She was thinking of many things, for to
her the thread of life was not broken by Death, but
kept winding along calmly and evenly. She thought
of her comrades, of those who were far away, and who
in pain and sorrow were living through the execution
together with them, and of those near by who were
to mount the scaffold with her. She was surprised
at Vasily-that he should have been so disturbed-he,
who had always been so brave, and who had jested with
Death. Thus, only on Tuesday morning, when all
together they had attached explosive projectiles to
their belts, which several hours later were to tear
them into pieces, Tanya Kovalchuk’s hands had
trembled with nervousness, and it had become necessary
to put her aside, while Vasily jested, made merry,
turned about, and was even so reckless that Werner
had said sternly:
“You must not be too familiar with Death.”
What was he afraid of now? But
this incomprehensible fear was so foreign to Musya’s
soul that she ceased searching for the cause of it-and
suddenly she was seized with a desperate desire to
see Seryozha Golovin, to laugh with him. She
meditated a little while, and then an even more desperate
desire came over her to see Werner and to convince
him of something. And imagining to herself that
Werner was in the next cell, driving his heels into
the ground with his distinct, measured steps, Musya
spoke, as if addressing him:
“No, Werner, my dear; it is
all nonsense; it isn’t at all important whether
or not you are killed. You are a sensible man,
but you seem to be playing chess, and that by taking
one figure after another the game is won. The
important thing, Werner, is that we ourselves are ready
to die. Do you understand? What do those
people think? That there is nothing more terrible
than death. They themselves have invented Death,
they are themselves afraid of it, and they try to frighten
us with it. I should like to do this- I should
like to go out alone before a whole regiment of soldiers
and fire upon them with a revolver. It would not
matter that I would be alone, while they would be thousands,
or that I might not kill any of them. It is that
which is important-that they are thousands. When
thousands kill one, it means that the one has conquered.
That is true, Werner, my dear. . . .”
But this, too, became so clear to
her that she did not feel like arguing further- Werner
must understand it himself. Perhaps her mind
simply did not want to stop at one thought-just as
a bird that soars with ease, which sees endless horizons,
and to which all space, all the depth, all the joy
of the soft and caressing azure are accessible.
The bell of the clock rang unceasingly, disturbing
the deep silence. And into this harmonious, remote,
beautiful sound the thoughts of the people flowed,
and also began to ring for her; and the smoothly gliding
images turned into music. It was just as if, on
a quiet, dark night, Musya was riding along a broad,
even road, while the easy springs of the carriage
rocked her and the little bells tinkled. All
alarm and agitation had passed, the fatigued body had
dissolved in the darkness, and her joyously wearied
fancy calmly created bright images, carried away by
their color and their peaceful tranquillity. Musya
recalled three of her comrades who had been hanged
but a short time before, and their faces seemed bright
and happy and near to her-nearer than those in life.
Thus does a man think with joy in the morning of the
house of his friends where he is to go in the evening,
and a greeting rises to his smiling lips,
Musya became very tired from walking.
She lay down cautiously on the cot and continued to
dream with slightly closed eyes. The clock-bell
rang unceasingly, stirring the mute silence, and bright,
singing images floated calmly before her. Musya
thought:
“Is it possible that this is
Death? My God! How beautiful it is!
Or is it Life? I do not know. I do not know.
I will look and listen.”
Her hearing had long given way to
her imagination-from the first moment of her imprisonment.
Inclined to be very musical, her ear had become keen
in the silence, and on this background of silence,
out of the meagre bits of reality, the footsteps of
the guards in the corridors, the ringing of the clock,
the rustling of the wind on the iron roof, the creaking
of the lantern-it created complete musical pictures.
At first Musya was afraid of them, brushed them away
from her as if they were the hallucinations of a sickly
mind. But later she understood that she herself
was well, and that this was no derangement of any
kind-and she gave herself up to the dreams calmly.
And now, suddenly, she seemed to hear
clearly and distinctly the sounds of military music.
In astonishment, she opened her eyes, lifted her head-outside
the window was black night, and the clock was striking.
“Again,” she thought calmly, and closed
her eyes. And as soon as she did so the music
resounded anew. She could hear distinctly how
the soldiers, a whole regiment, were coming from behind
the corner of the fortress, on the right, and now
they were passing her window. Their feet beat
time with measured steps upon the frozen ground:
One-two! One-two! She could even hear at
times the leather of the boots creaking, how suddenly
some one’s foot slipped and immediately recovered
its steps. And the music came ever nearer-it was
an entirely unfamiliar but a very loud and spirited
holiday march. Evidently there was some sort
of celebration in the fortress.
Now the band came up alongside of
her window and the cell was filled with merry, rhythmic,
harmoniously blended sounds. One large brass
trumpet brayed harshly out of tune, now too late, now
comically running ahead-Musya could almost see the
little soldier playing it, a great expression of earnestness
on his face-and she laughed.
Then everything moved away. The
footsteps died out-One-two! One-two! At
a distance the music sounded still more beautiful and
cheerful. The trumpet resounded now and then
with its merry, loud brass voice, out of tune,-and
then everything died away. And the clock on the
tower struck again, slowly, mournfully, hardly stirring
the silence.
“They are gone!” thought
Musya, with a feeling of slight sadness. She
felt sorry for the departing sounds, which had been
so cheerful and so comical. She was even sorry
for the departed little soldiers, because those busy
soldiers, with their brass trumpets and their creaking
boots, were of an entirely different sort, not at all
like those at whom she had felt like firing a revolver.
“Come again!” she begged
tenderly. And more came. The figures bent
over her, they surrounded her in a transparent cloud
and lifted her up, where the migrating birds were
soaring and screaming, like heralds. On the right
of her, on the left, above and below her -they screamed
like heralds. They called, they announced from
afar their flight. They flapped their wide wings
and the darkness supported them, even as the light
had supported them. And on their convex breasts,
cleaving the air asunder, the city far below reflected
a blue light. Musya’s heart beat ever more
evenly, her breathing grew ever more calm and quiet.
She was falling asleep. Her face looked fatigued
and pale. Beneath her eyes were dark circles,
her girlish, emaciated hands seemed so thin,-but upon
her lips was a smile. To-morrow, with the rise
of the sun, this human face would be distorted with
an inhuman grimace, her brain would be covered with
thick blood, and her eyes would bulge from their sockets
and look glassy,-but now she slept quietly and smiled
in her great immortality.
Musya fell asleep.
And the life of the prison went on,
deaf and sensitive, blind and sharp-sighted, like
eternal alarm itself. Somewhere people were walking.
Somewhere people were whispering. A gun clanked.
It seemed as if some one shouted. Perhaps no
one shouted at all-perhaps it merely seemed so in
the silence.
The little casement window in the
door opened noiselessly. A dark, mustached face
appeared in the black hole. For a long time it
stared at Musya in astonishment-and then disappeared
as noiselessly as it had appeared.
The bells rang and sang, for a long
time, painfully. It seemed as if the tired Hours
were climbing up a high mountain toward midnight, and
that it was becoming ever harder and harder to ascend.
They fall, they slip, they slide down with a groan-and
then again, they climb painfully toward the black
height.
Somewhere people were walking.
Somewhere people were whispering. And they were
already harnessing the horses to the black carriages
without lanterns.