To this
was added indications of hopeless insanity. Sometimes several men
were unable to hold him. The long-forgotten, living eyes of the
portrait began to torment him, and then his madness became
dreadful. All the people who surrounded his bed seemed to him
horrible portraits. The portrait doubled and quadrupled itself; all
the walls seemed hung with portraits, which fastened their living
eyes upon him; portraits glared at him from the ceiling, from the
floor; the room widened and lengthened endlessly, in order to make
room for more of the motionless eyes. The doctor who had undertaken
to attend him, having learned something of his strange history,
strove with all his might to fathom the secret connection between
the visions of his fancy and the occurrences of his life, but
without the slightest success. The sick man understood nothing,
felt nothing, save his own tortures, and gave utterance only to
frightful yells and unintelligible gibberish. At last his life
ended in a final attack of unutterable suffering. Nothing could be
found of all his great wealth; but when they beheld the mutilated
fragments of grand works of art, the value of which exceeded a
million, they understood the terrible use which had been made of
it.
Part 2
A THRONG of carriages and other vehicles stood at the entrance
of a house in which an auction was going on of the effects of one
of those wealthy art-lovers who have innocently passed for
Maecenases, and in a simple-minded fashion expended, to that end,
the millions amassed by their thrifty fathers, and frequently even
by their own early labours. The long saloon was filled with the
most motley throng of visitors, collected like birds of prey
swooping down upon an unburied corpse. There was a whole squadron
of Russian shop-keepers from the Gostinnui Dvor, and from the
old-clothes mart, in blue coats of foreign make. Their faces and
expressions were a little more natural here, and did not display
that fictitious desire to be subservient which is so marked in the
Russian shop-keeper when he stands before a customer in his shop.
Here they stood upon no ceremony, although the saloons were full of
those very aristocrats before whom, in any other place, they would
have been ready to sweep, with reverence, the dust brought in by
their feet. They were quite at their ease, handling pictures and
books without ceremony, when desirous of ascertaining the value of
the goods, and boldly upsetting bargains mentally secured in
advance by noble connoisseurs. There were many of those infallible
attendants of auctions who make it a point to go to one every day
as regularly as to take their breakfast; aristocratic connoisseurs
who look upon it as their duty not to miss any opportunity of
adding to their collections, and who have no other occupation
between twelve o'clock and one; and noble gentlemen, with garments
very threadbare, who make their daily appearance without any
selfish object in view, but merely to see how it all goes off.
A quantity of pictures were lying about in disorder: with them
were mingled furniture, and books with the cipher of the former
owner, who never was moved by any laudable desire to glance into
them. Chinese vases, marble slabs for tables, old and new furniture
with curving lines, with griffins, sphinxes, and lions' paws,
gilded and ungilded, chandeliers, sconces, all were heaped together
in a perfect chaos of art.
The auction appeared to be at its height.
The surging throng was competing for a portrait which could not
but arrest the attention of all who possessed any knowledge of art.
The skilled hand of an artist was plainly visible in it. The
portrait, which had apparently been several times restored and
renovated, represented the dark features of an Asiatic in flowing
garments, and with a strange and remarkable expression of
countenance; but what struck the buyers more than anything else was
the peculiar liveliness of the eyes. The more they were looked at,
the more did they seem to penetrate into the gazer's heart. This
peculiarity, this strange illusion achieved by the artist,
attracted the attention of nearly all. Many who had been bidding
gradually withdrew, for the price offered had risen to an
incredible sum. There remained only two well-known aristocrats,
amateurs of painting, who were unwilling to forego such an
acquisition. They grew warm, and would probably have run the
bidding up to an impossible sum, had not one of the onlookers
suddenly exclaimed, "Permit me to interrupt your competition for a
while: I, perhaps, more than any other, have a right to this
portrait."
These words at once drew the attention of all to him. He was a
tall man of thirty-five, with long black curls. His pleasant face,
full of a certain bright nonchalance, indicated a mind free from
all wearisome, worldly excitement; his garments had no pretence to
fashion: all about him indicated the artist. He was, in fact, B.
the painter, a man personally well known to many of those
present.
"However strange my words may seem to you," he continued,
perceiving that the general attention was directed to him, "if you
will listen to a short story, you may possibly see that I was right
in uttering them. Everything assures me that this is the portrait
which I am looking for."
A natural curiosity illuminated the faces of nearly all present;
and even the auctioneer paused as he was opening his mouth, and
with hammer uplifted in the air, prepared to listen. At the
beginning of the story, many glanced involuntarily towards the
portrait; but later on, all bent their attention solely on the
narrator, as his tale grew gradually more absorbing.
"You know that portion of the city which is called Kolomna," he
began. "There everything is unlike anything else in St. Petersburg.
Retired officials remove thither to live; widows; people not very
well off, who have acquaintances in the senate, and therefore
condemn themselves to this for nearly the whole of their lives;
and, in short, that whole list of people who can be described by
the words ash-coloured—people whose garments, faces, hair, eyes,
have a sort of ashy surface, like a day when there is in the sky
neither cloud nor sun. Among them may be retired actors, retired
titular councillors, retired sons of Mars, with ruined eyes and
swollen lips.
"Life in Kolomna is terribly dull: rarely does a carriage
appear, except, perhaps, one containing an actor, which disturbs
the universal stillness by its rumble, noise, and jingling. You can
get lodgings for five rubles a month, coffee in the morning
included.
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