He probed it cautiously with the knife—then poked at it with
a finger.
"Quite solid it is!" he muttered. "What in the world is it
likely to be?"
He thrust in, this time, all his fingers, and pulled forth—a
nose! His hands dropped to his sides for a moment. Then he rubbed
his eyes hard. Then again he probed the thing. A nose! Sheerly a
nose! Yes, and one familiar to him, somehow! Oh, horror spread upon
his feature! Yet that horror was a trifle compared with his
spouse's overmastering wrath.
"You brute!" she shouted frantically. "Where have you cut off
that nose? You villain, you! You drunkard! Why, I'll go and report
you to the police myself. The brigand, you! Three customers have
told me already about your pulling at their noses as you shaved
them till they could hardly stand it."
But Ivan Yakovlevitch was neither alive nor dead. This was the
more the case because, sure enough, he had recognised the nose. It
was the nose of Collegiate Assessor Kovalev—no less: it was the
nose of a gentleman whom he was accustomed to shave twice weekly,
on each Wednesday and each Sunday!
"Stop, Prascovia Osipovna!" at length he said. "I'll wrap the
thing in a clout, and lay it aside awhile, and take it away
altogether later."
"But I won't hear of such a thing being done! As if I'm going to
have a cut-off nose kicking about my room! Oh, you old stick! Maybe
you can just strop a razor still; but soon you'll be no good at all
for the rest of your work. You loafer, you wastrel, you bungler,
you blockhead! Aye, I'll tell the police of you. Take it away,
then. Take it away. Take it anywhere you like. Oh, that I'd never
caught the smell of it!"
Ivan Yakovlevitch was dumbfounded. He thought and thought, but
did not know what to think.
"The devil knows how it's happened," he said, scratching one
ear. "You see, I don't know for certain whether I came home drunk
last night or not. But certainly things look as though something
out of the way happened then, for bread comes of baking, and a nose
of something else altogether. Oh, I just can't make it out."
So he sat silent. At the thought that the police might find the
nose at his place, and arrest him, he felt frantic. Yes, already he
could see the red collar with the smart silver braiding—the sword!
He shuddered from head to foot.
But at last he got out, and donned waistcoat and shoes, wrapped
the nose in a clout, and departed amid Prascovia Osipovna's
forcible objurgations.
His one idea was to rid himself of the nose, and return quietly
home—to do so either by throwing the nose into the gutter in front
of the gates or by just letting it drop anywhere. Yet,
unfortunately, he kept meeting friends, and they kept saying to
him: "Where are you off to?" or "Whom have you arranged to shave at
this early hour?" until seizure of a fitting moment became
impossible. Once, true, he did succeed in dropping the thing, but
no sooner had he done so than a constable pointed at him with his
truncheon, and shouted: "Pick it up again! You've lost something,"
and he perforce had to take the nose into his possession once more,
and stuff it into a pocket. Meanwhile his desperation grew in
proportion as more and more booths and shops opened for business,
and more and more people appeared in the street.
At last he decided that he would go to the Isaakievsky Bridge,
and throw the thing, if he could, into the Neva. But here let me
confess my fault in not having said more about Ivan Yakovlevitch
himself, a man estimable in more respects than one.
Like every decent Russian tradesman, Ivan Yakovlevitch was a
terrible tippler. Daily he shaved the chins of others, but always
his own was unshorn, and his jacket (he never wore a top-coat)
piebald—black, thickly studded with greyish, brownish-yellowish
stains—and shiny of collar, and adorned with three pendent tufts of
thread instead of buttons. But, with that, Ivan Yakovlevitch was a
great cynic. Whenever Collegiate Assessor Kovalev was being shaved,
and said to him, according to custom: "Ivan Yakovlevitch, your
hands do smell!" he would retort: "But why should they smell?" and,
when the Collegiate Assessor had replied: "Really I do not know,
brother, but at all events they do," take a pinch of snuff, and
soap the Collegiate Assessor upon cheek, and under nose, and behind
ears, and around chin at his good will and pleasure.
So the worthy citizen stood on the Isaakievsky Bridge, and
looked about him. Then, leaning over the parapet, he feigned to be
trying to see if any fish were passing underneath. Then gently he
cast forth the nose.
At once ten puds-weight seemed to have been lifted from his
shoulders.
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