<h3>XII</h3>
<p>It appeared that Gemma was not very fond of Hoffmann, that she even thought him
… tedious! The fantastic, misty northern element in his stories was too remote
from her clear, southern nature. “It’s all fairy-tales, all written
for children!” she declared with some contempt. She was vaguely
conscious, too, of the lack of poetry in Hoffmann. But there was one of his
stories, the title of which she had forgotten, which she greatly liked; more
precisely speaking, it was only the beginning of this story that she liked; the
end she had either not read or had forgotten. The story was about a young man
who in some place, a sort of restaurant perhaps, meets a girl of striking
beauty, a Greek; she is accompanied by a mysterious and strange, wicked old
man. The young man falls in love with the girl at first sight; she looks at him
so mournfully, as though beseeching him to deliver her…. He goes out for an
instant, and, coming back into the restaurant, finds there neither the girl nor
the old man; he rushes off in pursuit of her, continually comes upon fresh
traces of her, follows them up, and can never by any means come upon her
anywhere. The lovely girl has vanished for him for ever and ever, and he is
never able to forget her imploring glance, and is tortured by the thought that
all the happiness of his life, perhaps, has slipped through his fingers.</p>
<p>Hoffmann does not end his story quite in that way; but so it had taken shape,
so it had remained, in Gemma’s memory.</p>
<p>“I fancy,” she said, “such meetings and such partings happen
oftener in the world than we suppose.”</p>
<p>Sanin was silent … and soon after he began talking … of Herr Klüber. It was the
first time he had referred to him; he had not once remembered him till that
instant.</p>
<p>Gemma was silent in her turn, and sank into thought, biting the nail of her
forefinger and fixing her eyes away. Then she began to speak in praise of her
betrothed, alluded to the excursion he had planned for the next day, and,
glancing swiftly at Sanin, was silent again.</p>
<p>Sanin did not know on what subject to turn the conversation.</p>
<p>Emil ran in noisily and waked Frau Lenore … Sanin was relieved by his
appearance.</p>
<p>Frau Lenore got up from her low chair. Pantaleone came in and announced that
dinner was ready. The friend of the family, ex-singer, and servant also
performed the duties of cook.</p>
<h3>XIII</h3>
<p>Sanin stayed on after dinner too. They did not let him go, still on the same
pretext of the terrible heat; and when the heat began to decrease, they
proposed going out into the garden to drink coffee in the shade of the acacias.
Sanin consented. He felt very happy. In the quietly monotonous, smooth current
of life lie hid great delights, and he gave himself up to these delights with
zest, asking nothing much of the present day, but also thinking nothing of the
morrow, nor recalling the day before. How much the mere society of such a girl
as Gemma meant to him! He would shortly part from her and, most likely, for
ever; but so long as they were borne, as in Uhland’s song, in one skiff
over the sea of life, untossed by tempest, well might the traveller rejoice and
be glad. And everything seemed sweet and delightful to the happy voyager. Frau
Lenore offered to play against him and Pantaleone at “tresette,”
instructed him in this not complicated Italian game, and won a few kreutzers
from him, and he was well content. Pantaleone, at Emil’s request, made
the poodle, Tartaglia, perform all his tricks, and Tartaglia jumped over a
stick “spoke,” that is, barked, sneezed, shut the door with his
nose, fetched his master’s trodden-down slippers; and, finally, with an
old cap on his head, he portrayed Marshal Bernadotte, subjected to the
bitterest upbraidings by the Emperor Napoleon on account of his treachery.
Napoleon’s part was, of course, performed by Pantaleone, and very
faithfully he performed it: he folded his arms across his chest, pulled a
cocked hat over his eyes, and spoke very gruffly and sternly, in
French—and heavens! what French! Tartaglia sat before his sovereign, all
huddled up, with dejected tail, and eyes blinking and twitching in confusion,
under the peak of his cap which was stuck on awry; from time to time when
Napoleon raised his voice, Bernadotte rose on his hind paws. “<i>Fuori,
traditore!</i>” cried Napoleon at last, forgetting in the excess of his
wrath that he had to sustain his rôle as a Frenchman to the end; and Bernadotte
promptly flew under the sofa, but quickly darted out again with a joyful bark,
as though to announce that the performance was over. All the spectators
laughed, and Sanin more than all.</p>
<p>Gemma had a particularly charming, continual, soft laugh, with very droll
little shrieks…. Sanin was fairly enchanted by that laugh—he could have
kissed her for those shrieks!</p>
<p>Night came on at last. He had in decency to take leave! After saying good-bye
several times over to every one, and repeating several times to all,
“till to-morrow!”—Emil he went so far as to kiss—Sanin
started home, carrying with him the image of the young girl, at one time
laughing, at another thoughtful, calm, and even indifferent—but always
attractive! Her eyes, at one time wide open, clear and bright as day, at
another time half shrouded by the lashes and deep and dark as night, seemed to
float before his eyes, piercing in a strange sweet way across all other images
and recollections.</p>
<p>Of Herr Klüber, of the causes impelling him to remain in Frankfort—in
short, of everything that had disturbed his mind the evening before—he
never thought once.</p>
<h3>XIV</h3>
<p>We must, however, say a few words about Sanin himself.</p>
<p>In the first place, he was very, very good-looking. A handsome, graceful
figure, agreeable, rather unformed features, kindly bluish eyes, golden hair, a
clear white and red skin, and, above all, that peculiar, naïvely-cheerful,
confiding, open, at the first glance, somewhat foolish expression, by which in
former days one could recognise directly the children of steady-going, noble
families, “sons of their fathers,” fine young landowners, born and
reared in our open, half-wild country parts,—a hesitating gait, a voice
with a lisp, a smile like a child’s the minute you looked at him …
lastly, freshness, health, softness, softness, softness,—there you have
the whole of Sanin. And secondly, he was not stupid and had picked up a fair
amount of knowledge. Fresh he had remained, for all his foreign tour; the
disturbing emotions in which the greater part of the young people of that day
were tempest-tossed were very little known to him.</p>
<p>Of late years, in response to the assiduous search for “new types,”
young men have begun to appear in our literature, determined at all hazards to
be “fresh”… as fresh as Flensburg oysters, when they reach
Petersburg…. Sanin was not like them. Since we have had recourse already to
simile, he rather recalled a young, leafy, freshly-grafted apple-tree in one of
our fertile orchards—or better still, a well-groomed, sleek,
sturdy-limbed, tender young “three-year-old” in some old-fashioned
seignorial stud stable, a young horse that they have hardly begun to break in
to the traces…. Those who came across Sanin in later years, when life had
knocked him about a good deal, and the sleekness and plumpness of youth had
long vanished, saw in him a totally different man.</p>
<p class="p2">
Next day Sanin was still in bed when Emil, in his best clothes, with a cane in
his hand and much pomade on his head, burst into his room, announcing that Herr
Klüber would be here directly with the carriage, that the weather promised to
be exquisite, that they had everything ready by now, but that mamma was not
going, as her head was bad again. He began to hurry Sanin, telling him that
there was not a minute to lose…. And Herr Klüber did, in fact, find Sanin still
at his toilet. He knocked at the door, came in, bowed with a bend from the
waist, expressed his readiness to wait as long as might be desired, and sat
down, his hat balanced elegantly on his knees. The handsome shop-manager had
got himself up and perfumed himself to excess: his every action was accompanied
by a powerful whiff of the most refined aroma. He arrived in a comfortable open
carriage—one of the kind called landau—drawn by two tall and
powerful but not well-shaped horses. A quarter of an hour later Sanin, Klüber,
and Emil, in this same carriage, drew up triumphantly at the steps of the
confectioner’s shop. Madame Roselli resolutely refused to join the party;
Gemma wanted to stay with her mother; but she simply turned her out.</p>
<p>“I don’t want any one,” she declared; “I shall go to
sleep. I would send Pantaleone with you too, only there would be no one to mind
the shop.”</p>
<p>“May we take Tartaglia?” asked Emil.</p>
<p>“Of course you may.”</p>
<p>Tartaglia immediately scrambled, with delighted struggles, on to the box and
sat there, licking himself; it was obviously a thing he was accustomed to.
Gemma put on a large straw hat with brown ribbons; the hat was bent down in
front, so as to shade almost the whole of her face from the sun. The line of
shadow stopped just at her lips; they wore a tender maiden flush, like the
petals of a centifoil rose, and her teeth gleamed stealthily—innocently
too, as when children smile. Gemma sat facing the horses, with Sanin; Klüber
and Emil sat opposite. The pale face of Frau Lenore appeared at the window;
Gemma waved her handkerchief to her, and the horses started.</p>
<h3>XV</h3>
<p>Soden is a little town half an hour’s distance from Frankfort. It lies in
a beautiful country among the spurs of the Taunus Mountains, and is known among
us in Russia for its waters, which are supposed to be beneficial to people with
weak lungs. The Frankforters visit it more for purposes of recreation, as Soden
possesses a fine park and various “wirthschaften,” where one may
drink beer and coffee in the shade of the tall limes and maples. The road from
Frankfort to Soden runs along the right bank of the Maine, and is planted all
along with fruit trees. While the carriage was rolling slowly along an
excellent road, Sanin stealthily watched how Gemma behaved to her betrothed; it
was the first time he had seen them together. <i>She</i> was quiet and simple
in her manner, but rather more reserved and serious than usual; <i>he</i> had
the air of a condescending schoolmaster, permitting himself and those under his
authority a discreet and decorous pleasure. Sanin saw no signs in him of any
marked attentiveness, of what the French call
“<i>empressement</i>,” in his demeanour to Gemma. It was clear that
Herr Klüber considered that it was a matter settled once for all, and that
therefore he saw no reason to trouble or excite himself. But his condescension
never left him for an instant! Even during a long ramble before dinner about
the wooded hills and valleys behind Soden, even when enjoying the beauties of
nature, he treated nature itself with the same condescension, through which his
habitual magisterial severity peeped out from time to time. So, for example, he
observed in regard to one stream that it ran too straight through the glade,
instead of making a few picturesque curves; he disapproved, too, of the conduct
of a bird—a chaffinch—for singing so monotonously. Gemma was not
bored, and even, apparently, was enjoying herself; but Sanin did not recognise
her as the Gemma of the preceding days; it was not that she seemed under a
cloud—her beauty had never been more dazzling—but her soul seemed
to have withdrawn into herself. With her parasol open and her gloves still
buttoned up, she walked sedately, deliberately, as well-bred young girls walk,
and spoke little. Emil, too, felt stiff, and Sanin more so than all. He was
somewhat embarrassed too by the fact that the conversation was all the time in
German. Only Tartaglia was in high spirits! He darted, barking frantically,
after blackbirds, leaped over ravines, stumps and roots, rushed headlong into
the water, lapped at it in desperate haste, shook himself, whining, and was off
like an arrow, his red tongue trailing after him almost to his shoulder. Herr
Klüber, for his part, did everything he supposed conducive to the mirthfulness
of the company; he begged them to sit down in the shade of a spreading
oak-tree, and taking out of a side pocket a small booklet entitled,
“<i>Knallerbsen; oder du sollst und wirst lachen!</i>” (Squibs; or
you must and shall laugh!) began reading the funny anecdotes of which the
little book was full. He read them twelve specimens; he aroused very little
mirth, however; only Sanin smiled, from politeness, and he himself, Herr
Klüber, after each anecdote, gave vent to a brief, business-like, but still
condescending laugh. At twelve o’clock the whole party returned to Soden
to the best tavern there.</p>
<p>They had to make arrangements about dinner. Herr Klüber proposed that the
dinner should be served in a summer-house closed in on all
sides—“<i>im Gartensalon</i>”; but at this point Gemma
rebelled and declared that she would have dinner in the open air, in the
garden, at one of the little tables set before the tavern; that she was tired
of being all the while with the same faces, and she wanted to see fresh ones.
At some of the little tables, groups of visitors were already sitting.</p>
<p>While Herr Klüber, yielding condescendingly to “the caprice of his
betrothed,” went off to interview the head waiter, Gemma stood immovable,
biting her lips and looking on the ground; she was conscious that Sanin was
persistently and, as it were, inquiringly looking at her—it seemed to
enrage her. At last Herr Klüber returned, announced that dinner would be ready
in half an hour, and proposed their employing the interval in a game of
skittles, adding that this was very good for the appetite, he, he, he! Skittles
he played in masterly fashion; as he threw the ball, he put himself into
amazingly heroic postures, with artistic play of the muscles, with artistic
flourish and shake of the leg. In his own way he was an athlete—and was
superbly built! His hands, too, were so white and handsome, and he wiped them
on such a sumptuous, gold-striped, Indian bandana!</p>
<p>The moment of dinner arrived, and the whole party seated themselves at the
table.</p>
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