Here an honest
sober man became a drunkard; there a shopkeeper's clerk robbed his
master; again, a driver who had conducted himself properly for a
number of years cut his passenger's throat for a groschen. It was
impossible that such occurrences, related, not without
embellishments, should not inspire a sort of involuntary horror
amongst the sedate inhabitants of Kolomna. No one entertained any
doubt as to the presence of an evil power in the usurer. They said
that he imposed conditions which made the hair rise on one's head,
and which the miserable wretch never afterward dared reveal to any
other being; that his money possessed a strange power of
attraction; that it grew hot of itself, and that it bore strange
marks. And it is worthy of remark, that all the colony of Kolomna,
all these poor old women, small officials, petty artists, and
insignificant people whom we have just recapitulated, agreed that
it was better to endure anything, and to suffer the extreme of
misery, rather than to have recourse to the terrible usurer. Old
women were even found dying of hunger, who preferred to kill their
bodies rather than lose their soul. Those who met him in the street
experienced an involuntary sense of fear. Pedestrians took care to
turn aside from his path, and gazed long after his tall, receding
figure. In his face alone there was sufficient that was uncommon to
cause any one to ascribe to him a supernatural nature. The strong
features, so deeply chiselled; the glowing bronze of his
complexion; the incredible thickness of his brows; the intolerable,
terrible eyes—everything seemed to indicate that the passions of
other men were pale compared to those raging within him. My father
stopped short every time he met him, and could not refrain each
time from saying, 'A devil, a perfect devil!' But I must introduce
you as speedily as possible to my father, the chief character of
this story.
"My father was a remarkable man in many respects. He was an
artist of rare ability, a self-taught artist, without teachers or
schools, principles and rules, carried away only by the thirst for
perfection, and treading a path indicated by his own instincts, for
reasons unknown, perchance, even to himself. Through some lofty and
secret instinct he perceived the presence of a soul in every
object. And this secret instinct and personal conviction turned his
brush to Christian subjects, grand and lofty to the last degree.
His was a strong character: he was an honourable, upright, even
rough man, covered with a sort of hard rind without, not entirely
lacking in pride, and given to expressing himself both sharply and
scornfully about people. He worked for very small results; that is
to say, for just enough to support his family and obtain the
materials he needed; he never, under any circumstances, refused to
aid any one, or to lend a helping hand to a poor artist; and he
believed with the simple, reverent faith of his ancestors. At
length, by his unintermitting labour and perseverance in the path
he had marked out for himself, he began to win the approbation of
those who honoured his self-taught talent. They gave him constant
orders for churches, and he never lacked employment.
"One of his paintings possessed a strong interest for him. I no
longer recollect the exact subject: I only know that he needed to
represent the Spirit of Darkness in it. He pondered long what form
to give him: he wished to concentrate in his face all that weighs
down and oppresses a man. In the midst of his meditations there
suddenly occurred to his mind the image of the mysterious usurer;
and he thought involuntarily, 'That's how I ought to paint the
Devil!' Imagine his amazement when one day, as he was at work in
his studio, he heard a knock at the door, and directly after there
entered that same terrible usurer.
"'You are an artist?' he said to my father abruptly.
"'I am,' answered my father in surprise, waiting for what should
come next.
"'Good! Paint my portrait. I may possibly die soon. I have no
children; but I do not wish to die completely, I wish to live. Can
you paint a portrait that shall appear as though it were
alive?'
"My father reflected, 'What could be better! he offers himself
for the Devil in my picture.' He promised. They agreed upon a time
and price; and the next day my father took palette and brushes and
went to the usurer's house. The lofty court-yard, dogs, iron doors
and locks, arched windows, coffers, draped with strange covers,
and, last of all, the remarkable owner himself, seated motionless
before him, all produced a strange impression on him. The windows
seemed intentionally so encumbered below that they admitted the
light only from the top. 'Devil take him, how well his face is
lighted!' he said to himself, and began to paint assiduously, as
though afraid that the favourable light would disappear. 'What
power!' he repeated to himself. 'If I only accomplish half a
likeness of him, as he is now, it will surpass all my other works:
he will simply start from the canvas if I am only partly true to
nature. What remarkable features!' He redoubled his energy; and
began himself to notice how some of his sitter's traits were making
their appearance on the canvas.
"But the more closely he approached resemblance, the more
conscious he became of an aggressive, uneasy feeling which he could
not explain to himself.
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