Sobbing, wagging his head, and beating himself on
the breast with his right hand, and with his left also seizing the lapel of Krestyan Ivanovich’s
lounging jacket, he wanted to speak and immediately explain something, but was unable to say a
word. Krestyan Ivanovich finally recovered from his astonishment.
“Come, calm yourself, sit down!” he said finally,
trying to sit Mr. Goliadkin in an armchair.
“I have enemies, Krestyan Ivanovich, I have enemies;
I have wicked enemies who have sworn to destroy me…” Mr. Goliadkin replied timorously and in a
whisper.
“Come, come, what’s this about enemies! There’s no
need to mention enemies, absolutely no need! Sit down, sit down,” Krestyan Ivanovich went on,
definitively sitting Mr. Goliadkin in the armchair.
Mr. Goliadkin finally sat down, not taking his eyes
from Krestyan Ivanovich. Krestyan Ivanovich, looking extremely displeased, began to pace up and
down his office. A long silence ensued.
“I’m grateful to you, Krestyan Ivanovich, quite
grateful and quite sensible of all you’ve now done for me. To my dying day I will not forget your
kindness, Krestyan Ivanovich,” Mr. Goliadkin said finally, getting up from his chair with an
offended look.
“Come, come, I tell you, enough!” Krestyan Ivanovich
responded rather sternly to Mr. Goliadkin’s outburst, sitting him down again. “Well, what is it?
Tell me, what’s this unpleasantness you have there,” Krestyan Ivanovich went on, “and what
enemies are you talking about? What is it with you there?”
“No, Krestyan Ivanovich, we’d better drop that now,”
replied Mr. Goliadkin, lowering his eyes to the ground, “better set it all aside for a time…for
another time, Krestyan Ivanovich, for a more opportune time, when everything is disclosed, and
the mask falls from certain faces, and certain things are laid bare. And meanwhile, naturally,
after what has occurred with us…you yourself will agree, Krestyan Ivanovich…Allow me to bid you
good morning, Krestyan Ivanovich,” said Mr. Goliadkin, this time resolutely and seriously getting
up from his place and seizing his hat.
“Ah, well…as you wish…hm…” (A moment of silence
ensued.) “I, for my part, you know, whatever I can…and I sincerely wish you well.”
“I understand you, Krestyan Ivanovich, I understand;
I understand you completely now…In any case, excuse me for having troubled you, Krestyan
Ivanovich.”
“Hm…No, that’s not what I wanted to say. However, as
you wish. Continue the medications as before…”
“I will continue the medications, as you say,
Krestyan Ivanovich, I will, and I’ll get them from the same apothecary. Nowadays, Krestyan
Ivanovich, even being an apothecary has become an important thing…”
“Oh? In what sense do you mean to say?”
“In a perfectly ordinary sense, Krestyan Ivanovich. I
mean to say, that’s how the world goes nowadays…”
“Hm…”
“And that every little brat, not only from the
apothecary, turns up his nose before a decent person now.”
“Hm…And how do you understand that?”
“I’m speaking, Krestyan Ivanovich, about a certain
person…about our mutual acquaintance, Krestyan Ivanovich, say, for instance, about Vladimir
Semyonovich…”
“Ah!…”
“Yes, Krestyan Ivanovich; and I know some people,
Krestyan Ivanovich, who do not hold so much to the general opinion as not to tell the truth
sometimes.”
“Ah!…How is that?”
“It’s just so, sir. That, however, is a side issue;
they sometimes know how to offer a cock with a sock.”
“What? Offer what?”
“A cock with a sock, Krestyan Ivanovich; it’s a
Russian saying. They sometimes know how to congratulate a person opportunely, for example—there
are such people, Krestyan Ivanovich.”
“Congratulate?”
“Yes, sir, congratulate, as a close acquaintance of
mine did the other day…”
“A close acquaintance of yours…ah! how’s that?” said
Krestyan Ivanovich, looking attentively at Mr Goliadkin.
“Yes, sir, a close acquaintance of mine congratulated
another, also quite a close acquaintance, and moreover an intimate, or, as they say, the sweetest
of friends, on his promotion, on receiving the rank of assessor. 4 It just came out by itself. ‘I am,’ he said, that is, ‘most feelingly
glad of the chance to offer you, Vladimir Semyonovich, my congratulations, my sincere congratulations, on your promotion. And my gladness is the greater in
that, nowadays, as all the world knows, there are no more little grannies telling fortunes.’ ”
Here Mr. Goliadkin nodded slyly and, narrowing his eyes, looked at Krestyan Ivanovich…
“Hm…So he said that…”
“He did, Krestyan Ivanovich, he said it and
immediately looked at Andrei Filippovich, the uncle of our little treasure, Vladimir Semyonovich.
But what is it to me, Krestyan Ivanovich, that he was made an assessor? What is it to me? And he
wants to get married, when the milk, if I may be permitted to say so, is not yet dry on his lips.
And so I told him. That is, I mean, Vladimir Semyonovich! I’ve told you everything now; allow me
to leave.”
“Hm…”
“Yes, Krestyan Ivanovich, allow me, I say, to leave
now. And here, to kill two birds with one stone—once I’ve cut the lad down with the little
grannies, I turn to Klara Olsufyevna (this was two days ago at Olsufy Ivanovich’s), and she had
just finished singing a heartfelt romance—that is, I say, ‘You have been pleased to sing a most
heartfelt romance, only you have not been listened to with a pure heart.’ And I clearly hint by
that, you understand, Krestyan Ivanovich, I clearly hint by that, that what was being sought was
not her, but something further…”
“Ah! And what about him?”
“He bit the lemon, Krestyan Ivanovich, as the saying
goes.”
“Hm…”
“Yes, sir, Krestyan Ivanovich. And I also say to the
old man—that is, Olsufy Ivanovich, I say, I know how much I owe you, I fully appreciate your
benefactions, which you have showered upon me almost from my childhood. But open your eyes,
Olsufy Ivanovich, I say. Look around.
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