It is a very foolish and
unreasonable one.
Nor can I understand the stupidity of the kings who have not
done away with it before now. Judging by all the circumstances, it
seems to me as though I had fallen into the hands of the
Inquisition, and as though the man whom I took to be the Chancellor
was the Grand Inquisitor. But yet I cannot understand how the king
could fall into the hands of the Inquisition. The affair may have
been arranged by France—especially Polignac—he is a hound, that
Polignac! He has sworn to compass my death, and now he is hunting
me down. But I know, my friend, that you are only a tool of the
English. They are clever fellows, and have a finger in every pie.
All the world knows that France sneezes when England takes a pinch
of snuff.
The 25th.
To-day the Grand Inquisitor came into my room; when I heard his
steps in the distance, I hid myself under a chair. When he did not
see me, he began to call. At first he called “Poprishchin!” I made
no answer. Then he called “Axanti Ivanovitch! Titular Councillor!
Nobleman!” I still kept silence. “Ferdinand the Eighth, King of
Spain!” I was on the point of putting out my head, but I thought,
“No, brother, you shall not deceive me! You shall not pour water on
my head again!”
But he had already seen me and drove me from under the chair
with his stick. The cursed stick really hurts one. But the
following discovery compensated me for all the pain, i.e. that
every cock has his Spain under his feathers. The Grand Inquisitor
went angrily away, and threatened me with some punishment or other.
I felt only contempt for his powerless spite, for I know that he
only works like a machine, like a tool of the English.
34 March. February, 349.
No, I have no longer power to endure. O God! what are they going
to do with me? They pour cold water on my head. They take no notice
of me, and seem neither to see nor hear. Why do they torture me?
What do they want from one so wretched as myself? What can I give
them? I possess nothing.
I cannot bear all their tortures; my head aches as though
everything were turning round in a circle. Save me! Carry me away!
Give me three steeds swift as the wind! Mount your seat, coachman,
ring bells, gallop horses, and carry me straight out of this world.
Farther, ever farther, till nothing more is to be seen!
Ah! the heaven bends over me already; a star glimmers in the
distance; the forest with its dark trees in the moonlight rushes
past; a bluish mist floats under my feet; music sounds in the
cloud; on the one side is the sea, on the other, Italy; beyond I
also see Russian peasants' houses. Is not my parents' house there
in the distance? Does not my mother sit by the window? O mother,
mother, save your unhappy son! Let a tear fall on his aching head!
See how they torture him! Press the poor orphan to your bosom! He
has no rest in this world; they hunt him from place to place.
Mother, mother, have pity on your sick child! And do you know
that the Bey of Algiers has a wart under his nose?
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