Will you take
them?"
Nejdanov remained motionless, and did not say anything. "Silence
means consent! Thanks!" Paklin exclaimed gaily and vanished.
Nejdanov was left alone. He continued gazing out into the
narrow, gloomy court, unpenetrated by the sun even in summer, and
he felt sad and gloomy at heart.
We already know that Nejdanov's father was Prince G., a rich
adjutant-general. His mother was the daughter of the general's
governess, a pretty girl who died on the day of Nejdanov's birth.
He received his early education in a boarding school kept by a
certain Swiss, a very energetic and severe pedagogue, after which
he entered the university. His great ambition was to study law, but
his father, who had a violent hatred for nihilists, made him go in
for history and philology, or for "aesthetics" as Nejdanov put it
with a bitter smile. His father used to see him about four times a
year in all, but was, nevertheless, interested in his welfare, and
when he died, left him a sum of six thousand roubles "in memory of
Nastinka" his mother. Nejdanov received the interest on this money
from his brothers the Princes G., which they were pleased to call
an allowance.
Paklin had good reason to call him an aristocrat. Everything
about him betokened his origin. His tiny ears, hands, feet, his
small but fine features, delicate skin, wavy hair; his very voice
was pleasant, although it was slightly guttural. He was highly
strung, frightfully conceited, very susceptible, and even
capricious. The false position he had been placed in from childhood
had made him sensitive and irritable, but his natural generosity
had kept him from becoming suspicious and mistrustful. This same
false position was the cause of an utter inconsistency, which
permeated his whole being. He was fastidiously accurate and
horribly squeamish, tried to be cynical and coarse in his speech,
but was an idealist by nature. He was passionate and pure-minded,
bold and timid at the same time, and, like a repentant sinner,
ashamed of his sins; he was ashamed alike of his timidity and his
purity, and considered it his duty to scoff at all idealism. He had
an affectionate heart, but held himself aloof from everybody, was
easily exasperated, but never bore ill-will. He was furious with
his father for having made him take up "aesthetics," openly
interested himself in politics and social questions, professed the
most extreme views (which meant more to him than mere words), but
secretly took a delight in art, poetry, beauty in all its
manifestations, and in his inspired moments wrote verses. It is
true that he carefully hid the copy-book in which they were
written, and none of his St. Petersburg friends, with the exception
of Paklin, and he only by his peculiar intuitiveness, suspected its
existence. Nothing hurt or offended Nejdanov more than the smallest
allusion to his poetry, which he regarded as an unpardonable
weakness in himself. His Swiss schoolmaster had taught him a great
many things, and he was not afraid of hard work. He applied himself
readily and zealously, but did not work consecutively. All his
friends loved him. They were attracted by his natural sense of
justice, his kindness, and his pure-mindedness, but Nejdanov was
not born under a lucky star, and did not find life an easy matter.
He was fully conscious of this fact and felt utterly lonely in
spite of the untiring devotion of his friends.
He stood meditating at the window. Sad, oppressive thoughts rose
up in his mind one after another about the prospective journey, the
new and unexpected change that was coming into his life. He had no
regrets at the thought of leaving St. Petersburg, as he would leave
nothing behind that was especially dear to him, and he knew that he
would be back in the autumn; but he was pervaded by the spirit of
indecision, and an involuntary melancholy came over him.
"A fine tutor I shall make!" flashed across his mind. "Am I cut
out for a schoolmaster?" He was ready to reproach himself for
having undertaken the duties of a tutor, and would have been unjust
in doing so. Nejdanov was sufficiently cultured, and, in spite of
his uncertain temperament, children grew readily fond of him and he
of them. His depression was due to that feeling which takes
possession of one before any change of place, a feeling experienced
by all melancholy, dreaming people and unknown to those of
energetic, sanguine temperaments, who always rejoice at any break
in the humdrum of their daily existence, and welcome a change of
abode with pleasure. Nejdanov was so lost in his meditations that
his thoughts began quite unconsciously to take the form of words.
His wandering sensations began to arrange themselves into measured
cadences.
"Damn!" he exclaimed aloud.
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