It was certainly some
diabolical apparition. I know that the world denies the existence
of the Devil, and therefore I will not speak of him. I will only
say that I painted him with repugnance: I felt no liking for my
work, even at the time. I tried to force myself, and, stifling
every emotion in a hard-hearted way, to be true to nature. I have
been informed that this portrait is passing from hand to hand, and
sowing unpleasant impressions, inspiring artists with feelings of
envy, of dark hatred towards their brethren, with malicious thirst
for persecution and oppression. May the Almighty preserve you from
such passions! There is nothing more terrible.'
"He blessed and embraced me. Never in my life was I so grandly
moved. Reverently, rather than with the feeling of a son, I leaned
upon his breast, and kissed his scattered silver locks.
"Tears shone in his eyes. 'Fulfil my one request, my son,' said
he, at the moment of parting. 'You may chance to see the portrait I
have mentioned somewhere. You will know it at once by the strange
eyes, and their peculiar expression. Destroy it at any cost.'
"Judge for yourselves whether I could refuse to promise, with an
oath, to fulfil this request. In the space of fifteen years I had
never succeeded in meeting with anything which in any way
corresponded to the description given me by my father, until now,
all of a sudden, at an auction—"
The artist did not finish his sentence, but turned his eyes to
the wall in order to glance once more at the portrait. The entire
throng of auditors made the same movement, seeking the wonderful
portrait with their eyes. But, to their extreme amazement, it was
no longer on the wall. An indistinct murmur and exclamation ran
through the crowd, and then was heard distinctly the word,
"stolen." Some one had succeeded in carrying it off, taking
advantage of the fact that the attention of the spectators was
distracted by the story. And those present long remained in a state
of surprise, not knowing whether they had really seen those
remarkable eyes, or whether it was simply a dream which had floated
for an instant before their eyesight, strained with long gazing at
old pictures.
THE CALASH
The town of B— had become very lively since a cavalry regiment
had taken up its quarters in it. Up to that date it had been
mortally wearisome there. When you happened to pass through the
town and glanced at its little mud houses with their incredibly
gloomy aspect, the pen refuses to express what you felt. You
suffered a terrible uneasiness as if you had just lost all your
money at play, or had committed some terrible blunder in company.
The plaster covering the houses, soaked by the rain, had fallen
away in many places from their walls, which from white had become
streaked and spotted, whilst old reeds served to thatch them.
Following a custom very common in the towns of South Russia, the
chief of police has long since had all the trees in the gardens cut
down to improve the view. One never meets anything in the town,
unless it is a cock crossing the road, full of dust and soft as a
pillow. At the slightest rain this dust is turned into mud, and
then all the streets are filled with pigs. Displaying to all their
grave faces, they utter such grunts that travellers only think of
pressing their horses to get away from them as soon as possible.
Sometimes some country gentleman of the neighbourhood, the owner of
a dozen serfs, passes in a vehicle which is a kind of compromise
between a carriage and a cart, surrounded by sacks of flour, and
whipping up his bay mare with her colt trotting by her side. The
aspect of the marketplace is mournful enough. The tailor's house
sticks out very stupidly, not squarely to the front but sideways.
Facing it is a brick house with two windows, unfinished for fifteen
years past, and further on a large wooden market-stall standing by
itself and painted mud-colour. This stall, which was to serve as a
model, was built by the chief of police in the time of his youth,
before he got into the habit of falling asleep directly after
dinner, and of drinking a kind of decoction of dried goose-berries
every evening. All around the rest of the market-place are nothing
but palings. But in the centre are some little sheds where a packet
of round cakes, a stout woman in a red dress, a bar of soap, some
pounds of bitter almonds, some lead, some cotton, and two shopmen
playing at "svaika," a game resembling quoits, are always to be
seen.
But on the arrival of the cavalry regiment everything changed.
The streets became more lively and wore quite another aspect. Often
from their little houses the inhabitants would see a tall and
well-made officer with a plumed hat pass by, on his way to the
quarters of one of his comrades to discuss the chances of promotion
or the qualities of a new tobacco, or perhaps to risk at play his
carriage, which might indeed be called the carriage of all the
regiment, since it belonged in turn to every one of them. To-day it
was the major who drove out in it, to-morrow it was seen in the
lieutenant's coach-house, and a week later the major's servant was
again greasing its wheels.
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