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<p><br/></p>
<h1> BOYHOOD </h1>
<p><br/></p>
<h2> By Leo Tolstoy </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<h3> Translated by C.J. HOGARTH </h3>
<p><br/></p>
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<h2> I. A SLOW JOURNEY </h2>
<p>Again two carriages stood at the front door of the house at Petrovskoe. In
one of them sat Mimi, the two girls, and their maid, with the bailiff,
Jakoff, on the box, while in the other—a britchka—sat Woloda,
myself, and our servant Vassili. Papa, who was to follow us to Moscow in a
few days, was standing bareheaded on the entrance-steps. He made the sign
of the cross at the windows of the carriages, and said:</p>
<p>"Christ go with you! Good-bye."</p>
<p>Jakoff and our coachman (for we had our own horses) lifted their caps in
answer, and also made the sign of the cross.</p>
<p>"Amen. God go with us!"</p>
<p>The carriages began to roll away, and the birch-trees of the great avenue
filed out of sight.</p>
<p>I was not in the least depressed on this occasion, for my mind was not so
much turned upon what I had left as upon what was awaiting me. In
proportion as the various objects connected with the sad recollections
which had recently filled my imagination receded behind me, those
recollections lost their power, and gave place to a consolatory feeling of
life, youthful vigour, freshness, and hope.</p>
<p>Seldom have I spent four days more—well, I will not say gaily, since
I should still have shrunk from appearing gay—but more agreeably and
pleasantly than those occupied by our journey.</p>
<p>No longer were my eyes confronted with the closed door of Mamma's room
(which I had never been able to pass without a pang), nor with the covered
piano (which nobody opened now, and at which I could never look without
trembling), nor with mourning dresses (we had each of us on our ordinary
travelling clothes), nor with all those other objects which recalled to me
so vividly our irreparable loss, and forced me to abstain from any
manifestation of merriment lest I should unwittingly offend against HER
memory.</p>
<p>On the contrary, a continual succession of new and exciting objects and
places now caught and held my attention, and the charms of spring awakened
in my soul a soothing sense of satisfaction with the present and of
blissful hope for the future.</p>
<p>Very early next morning the merciless Vassili (who had only just entered
our service, and was therefore, like most people in such a position,
zealous to a fault) came and stripped off my counterpane, affirming that
it was time for me to get up, since everything was in readiness for us to
continue our journey. Though I felt inclined to stretch myself and rebel—though
I would gladly have spent another quarter of an hour in sweet enjoyment of
my morning slumber—Vassili's inexorable face showed that he would
grant me no respite, but that he was ready to tear away the counterpane
twenty times more if necessary. Accordingly I submitted myself to the
inevitable and ran down into the courtyard to wash myself at the fountain.</p>
<p>In the coffee-room, a tea-kettle was already surmounting the fire which
Milka the ostler, as red in the face as a crab, was blowing with a pair of
bellows. All was grey and misty in the courtyard, like steam from a
smoking dunghill, but in the eastern sky the sun was diffusing a clear,
cheerful radiance, and making the straw roofs of the sheds around the
courtyard sparkle with the night dew. Beneath them stood our horses, tied
to mangers, and I could hear the ceaseless sound of their chewing. A
curly-haired dog which had been spending the night on a dry dunghill now
rose in lazy fashion and, wagging its tail, walked slowly across the
courtyard.</p>
<p>The bustling landlady opened the creaking gates, turned her meditative
cows into the street (whence came the lowing and bellowing of other
cattle), and exchanged a word or two with a sleepy neighbour. Philip, with
his shirt-sleeves rolled up, was working the windlass of a draw-well, and
sending sparkling fresh water coursing into an oaken trough, while in the
pool beneath it some early-rising ducks were taking a bath. It gave me
pleasure to watch his strongly-marked, bearded face, and the veins and
muscles as they stood out upon his great powerful hands whenever he made
an extra effort. In the room behind the partition-wall where Mimi and the
girls had slept (yet so near to ourselves that we had exchanged
confidences overnight) movements now became audible, their maid kept
passing in and out with clothes, and, at last the door opened and we were
summoned to breakfast. Woloda, however, remained in a state of bustle
throughout as he ran to fetch first one article and then another and urged
the maid to hasten her preparations.</p>
<p>The horses were put to, and showed their impatience by tinkling their
bells. Parcels, trunks, dressing-cases, and boxes were replaced, and we
set about taking our seats. Yet, every time that we got in, the mountain
of luggage in the britchka seemed to have grown larger than before, and we
had much ado to understand how things had been arranged yesterday, and how
we should sit now. A tea-chest, in particular, greatly inconvenienced me,
but Vassili declared that "things will soon right themselves," and I had
no choice but to believe him.</p>
<p>The sun was just rising, covered with dense white clouds, and every object
around us was standing out in a cheerful, calm sort of radiance. The whole
was beautiful to look at, and I felt comfortable and light of heart.</p>
<p>Before us the road ran like a broad, sinuous ribbon through cornfields
glittering with dew. Here and there a dark bush or young birch-tree cast a
long shadow over the ruts and scattered grass-tufts of the track. Yet even
the monotonous din of our carriage-wheels and collar-bells could not drown
the joyous song of soaring larks, nor the combined odour of moth-eaten
cloth, dust, and sourness peculiar to our britchka overpower the fresh
scents of the morning. I felt in my heart that delightful impulse to be up
and doing which is a sign of sincere enjoyment.</p>
<p>As I had not been able to say my prayers in the courtyard of the inn, but
had nevertheless been assured once that on the very first day when I
omitted to perform that ceremony some misfortune would overtake me, I now
hastened to rectify the omission. Taking off my cap, and stooping down in
a corner of the britchka, I duly recited my orisons, and unobtrusively
signed the sign of the cross beneath my coat. Yet all the while a thousand
different objects were distracting my attention, and more than once I
inadvertently repeated a prayer twice over.</p>
<p>Soon on the little footpath beside the road became visible some slowly
moving figures. They were pilgrims. On their heads they had dirty
handkerchiefs, on their backs wallets of birch-bark, and on their feet
bundles of soiled rags and heavy bast shoes. Moving their staffs in
regular rhythm, and scarcely throwing us a glance, they pressed onwards
with heavy tread and in single file.</p>
<p>"Where have they come from?" I wondered to myself, "and whither are they
bound? Is it a long pilgrimage they are making?" But soon the shadows they
cast on the road became indistinguishable from the shadows of the bushes
which they passed.</p>
<p>Next a carriage-and-four could be seen approaching us. In two seconds the
faces which looked out at us from it with smiling curiosity had vanished.
How strange it seemed that those faces should have nothing in common with
me, and that in all probability they would never meet my eyes again!</p>
<p>Next came a pair of post-horses, with the traces looped up to their
collars. On one of them a young postillion-his lamb's wool cap cocked to
one side-was negligently kicking his booted legs against the flanks of his
steed as he sang a melancholy ditty. Yet his face and attitude seemed to
me to express such perfect carelessness and indolent ease that I imagined
it to be the height of happiness to be a postillion and to sing melancholy
songs.</p>
<p>Far off, through a cutting in the road, there soon stood out against the
light-blue sky, the green roof of a village church. Presently the village
itself became visible, together with the roof of the manor-house and the
garden attached to it. Who lived in that house? Children, parents,
teachers? Why should we not call there and make the acquaintance of its
inmates?</p>
<p>Next we overtook a file of loaded waggons—a procession to which our
vehicles had to yield the road.</p>
<p>"What have you got in there?" asked Vassili of one waggoner who was
dangling his legs lazily over the splashboard of his conveyance and
flicking his whip about as he gazed at us with a stolid, vacant look; but
he only made answer when we were too far off to catch what he said.</p>
<p>"And what have YOU got?" asked Vassili of a second waggoner who was lying
at full length under a new rug on the driving-seat of his vehicle. The red
poll and red face beneath it lifted themselves up for a second from the
folds of the rug, measured our britchka with a cold, contemptuous look,
and lay down again; whereupon I concluded that the driver was wondering to
himself who we were, whence we had come, and whither we were going.</p>
<p>These various objects of interest had absorbed so much of my time that, as
yet, I had paid no attention to the crooked figures on the verst posts as
we passed them in rapid succession; but in time the sun began to burn my
head and back, the road to become increasingly dusty, the impedimenta in
the carriage to grow more and more uncomfortable, and myself to feel more
and more cramped. Consequently, I relapsed into devoting my whole
faculties to the distance-posts and their numerals, and to solving
difficult mathematical problems for reckoning the time when we should
arrive at the next posting-house.</p>
<p>"Twelve versts are a third of thirty-six, and in all there are forty-one
to Lipetz. We have done a third and how much, then?", and so forth, and so
forth.</p>
<p>"Vassili," was my next remark, on observing that he was beginning to nod
on the box-seat, "suppose we change seats? Will you?" Vassili agreed, and
had no sooner stretched himself out in the body of the vehicle than he
began to snore. To me on my new perch, however, a most interesting
spectacle now became visible—namely, our horses, all of which were
familiar to me down to the smallest detail.</p>
<p>"Why is Diashak on the right today, Philip, not on the left?" I asked
knowingly. "And Nerusinka is not doing her proper share of the pulling."</p>
<p>"One could not put Diashak on the left," replied Philip, altogether
ignoring my last remark. "He is not the kind of horse to put there at all.
A horse like the one on the left now is the right kind of one for the
job."</p>
<p>After this fragment of eloquence, Philip turned towards Diashak and began
to do his best to worry the poor animal by jogging at the reins, in spite
of the fact that Diashak was doing well and dragging the vehicle almost
unaided. This Philip continued to do until he found it convenient to
breathe and rest himself awhile and to settle his cap askew, though it had
looked well enough before.</p>
<p>I profited by the opportunity to ask him to let me have the reins to hold,
until, the whole six in my hand, as well as the whip, I had attained
complete happiness. Several times I asked whether I was doing things
right, but, as usual, Philip was never satisfied, and soon destroyed my
felicity.</p>
<p>The heat increased until a hand showed itself at the carriage window, and
waved a bottle and a parcel of eatables; whereupon Vassili leapt briskly
from the britchka, and ran forward to get us something to eat and drink.</p>
<p>When we arrived at a steep descent, we all got out and ran down it to a
little bridge, while Vassili and Jakoff followed, supporting the carriage
on either side, as though to hold it up in the event of its threatening to
upset.</p>
<p>After that, Mimi gave permission for a change of seats, and sometimes
Woloda or myself would ride in the carriage, and Lubotshka or Katenka in
the britchka. This arrangement greatly pleased the girls, since much more
fun went on in the britchka. Just when the day was at its hottest, we got
out at a wood, and, breaking off a quantity of branches, transformed our
vehicle into a bower. This travelling arbour then bustled on to catch the
carriage up, and had the effect of exciting Lubotshka to one of those
piercing shrieks of delight which she was in the habit of occasionally
emitting.</p>
<p>At last we drew near the village where we were to halt and dine. Already
we could perceive the smell of the place—the smell of smoke and tar
and sheep-and distinguish the sound of voices, footsteps, and carts. The
bells on our horses began to ring less clearly than they had done in the
open country, and on both sides the road became lined with huts—dwellings
with straw roofs, carved porches, and small red or green painted shutters
to the windows, through which, here and there, was a woman's face looking
inquisitively out. Peasant children clad in smocks only stood staring
open-eyed or, stretching out their arms to us, ran barefooted through the
dust to climb on to the luggage behind, despite Philip's menacing
gestures. Likewise, red-haired waiters came darting around the carriages
to invite us, with words and signs, to select their several hostelries as
our halting-place.</p>
<p>Presently a gate creaked, and we entered a courtyard. Four hours of rest
and liberty now awaited us.</p>
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<h2> II. THE THUNDERSTORM </h2>
<p>The sun was sinking towards the west, and his long, hot rays were burning
my neck and cheeks beyond endurance, while thick clouds of dust were
rising from the road and filling the whole air. Not the slightest wind was
there to carry it away. I could not think what to do. Neither the
dust-blackened face of Woloda dozing in a corner, nor the motion of
Philip's back, nor the long shadow of our britchka as it came bowling
along behind us brought me any relief. I concentrated my whole attention
upon the distance-posts ahead and the clouds which, hitherto dispersed
over the sky, were now assuming a menacing blackness, and beginning to
form themselves into a single solid mass.</p>
<p>From time to time distant thunder could be heard—a circumstance
which greatly increased my impatience to arrive at the inn where we were
to spend the night. A thunderstorm always communicated to me an
inexpressibly oppressive feeling of fear and gloom.</p>
<p>Yet we were still ten versts from the next village, and in the meanwhile
the large purple cloudbank—arisen from no one knows where—was
advancing steadily towards us. The sun, not yet obscured, was picking out
its fuscous shape with dazzling light, and marking its front with grey
stripes running right down to the horizon. At intervals, vivid lightning
could be seen in the distance, followed by low rumbles which increased
steadily in volume until they merged into a prolonged roll which seemed to
embrace the entire heavens. At length, Vassili got up and covered over the
britchka, the coachman wrapped himself up in his cloak and lifted his cap
to make the sign of the cross at each successive thunderclap, and the
horses pricked up their ears and snorted as though to drink in the fresh
air which the flying clouds were outdistancing. The britchka began to roll
more swiftly along the dusty road, and I felt uneasy, and as though the
blood were coursing more quickly through my veins. Soon the clouds had
veiled the face of the sun, and though he threw a last gleam of light to
the dark and terrifying horizon, he had no choice but to disappear behind
them.</p>
<p>Suddenly everything around us seemed changed, and assumed a gloomy aspect.
A wood of aspen trees which we were passing seemed to be all in a tremble,
with its leaves showing white against the dark lilac background of the
clouds, murmuring together in an agitated manner. The tops of the larger
trees began to bend to and fro, and dried leaves and grass to whirl about
in eddies over the road. Swallows and white-breasted swifts came darting
around the britchka and even passing in front of the forelegs of the
horses. While rooks, despite their outstretched wings, were laid, as it
were, on their keels by the wind. Finally, the leather apron which covered
us began to flutter about and to beat against the sides of the conveyance.</p>
<p>The lightning flashed right into the britchka as, cleaving the obscurity
for a second, it lit up the grey cloth and silk galloon of the lining and
Woloda's figure pressed back into a corner.</p>
<p>Next came a terrible sound which, rising higher and higher, and spreading
further and further, increased until it reached its climax in a deafening
thunderclap which made us tremble and hold our breaths. "The wrath of God"—what
poetry there is in that simple popular conception!</p>
<p>The pace of the vehicle was continually increasing, and from Philip's and
Vassili's backs (the former was tugging furiously at the reins) I could
see that they too were alarmed.</p>
<p>Bowling rapidly down an incline, the britchka cannoned violently against a
wooden bridge at the bottom. I dared not stir and expected destruction
every moment.</p>
<p>Crack! A trace had given way, and, in spite of the ceaseless, deafening
thunderclaps, we had to pull up on the bridge.</p>
<p>Leaning my head despairingly against the side of the britchka, I followed
with a beating heart the movements of Philip's great black fingers as he
tied up the broken trace and, with hands and the butt-end of the whip,
pushed the harness vigorously back into its place.</p>
<p>My sense of terror was increasing with the violence of the thunder.
Indeed, at the moment of supreme silence which generally precedes the
greatest intensity of a storm, it mounted to such a height that I felt as
though another quarter of an hour of this emotion would kill me.</p>
<p>Just then there appeared from beneath the bridge a human being who, clad
in a torn, filthy smock, and supported on a pair of thin shanks bare of
muscles, thrust an idiotic face, a tremulous, bare, shaven head, and a
pair of red, shining stumps in place of hands into the britchka.</p>
<p>"M-my lord! A copeck for—for God's sake!" groaned a feeble voice as
at each word the wretched being made the sign of the cross and bowed
himself to the ground.</p>
<p>I cannot describe the chill feeling of horror which penetrated my heart at
that moment. A shudder crept through all my hair, and my eyes stared in
vacant terror at the outcast.</p>
<p>Vassili, who was charged with the apportioning of alms during the journey,
was busy helping Philip, and only when everything had been put straight
and Philip had resumed the reins again had he time to look for his purse.
Hardly had the britchka begun to move when a blinding flash filled the
welkin with a blaze of light which brought the horses to their haunches.
Then, the flash was followed by such an ear-splitting roar that the very
vault of heaven seemed to be descending upon our heads. The wind blew
harder than ever, and Vassili's cloak, the manes and tails of the horses,
and the carriage-apron were all slanted in one direction as they waved
furiously in the violent blast.</p>
<p>Presently, upon the britchka's top there fell some large drops of rain—"one,
two, three:" then suddenly, and as though a roll of drums were being
beaten over our heads, the whole countryside resounded with the clatter of
the deluge.</p>
<p>From Vassili's movements, I could see that he had now got his purse open,
and that the poor outcast was still bowing and making the sign of the
cross as he ran beside the wheels of the vehicle, at the imminent risk of
being run over, and reiterated from time to time his plea, "For-for God's
sake!" At last a copeck rolled upon the ground, and the miserable creature—his
mutilated arms, with their sleeves wet through and through, held out
before him—stopped perplexed in the roadway and vanished from my
sight.</p>
<p>The heavy rain, driven before the tempestuous wind, poured down in
pailfuls and, dripping from Vassili's thick cloak, formed a series of
pools on the apron. The dust became changed to a paste which clung to the
wheels, and the ruts became transformed into muddy rivulets.</p>
<p>At last, however, the lightning grew paler and more diffuse, and the
thunderclaps lost some of their terror amid the monotonous rattling of the
downpour. Then the rain also abated, and the clouds began to disperse. In
the region of the sun, a lightness appeared, and between the white-grey
clouds could be caught glimpses of an azure sky.</p>
<p>Finally, a dazzling ray shot across the pools on the road, shot through
the threads of rain—now falling thin and straight, as from a sieve—,
and fell upon the fresh leaves and blades of grass. The great cloud was
still louring black and threatening on the far horizon, but I no longer
felt afraid of it—I felt only an inexpressibly pleasant hopefulness
in proportion, as trust in life replaced the late burden of fear. Indeed,
my heart was smiling like that of refreshed, revivified Nature herself.</p>
<p>Vassili took off his cloak and wrung the water from it. Woloda flung back
the apron, and I stood up in the britchka to drink in the new, fresh,
balm-laden air. In front of us was the carriage, rolling along and looking
as wet and resplendent in the sunlight as though it had just been
polished. On one side of the road boundless oatfields, intersected in
places by small ravines which now showed bright with their moist earth and
greenery, stretched to the far horizon like a checkered carpet, while on
the other side of us an aspen wood, intermingled with hazel bushes, and
parquetted with wild thyme in joyous profusion, no longer rustled and
trembled, but slowly dropped rich, sparkling diamonds from its
newly-bathed branches on to the withered leaves of last year.</p>
<p>From above us, from every side, came the happy songs of little birds
calling to one another among the dripping brushwood, while clear from the
inmost depths of the wood sounded the voice of the cuckoo. So delicious
was the wondrous scent of the wood, the scent which follows a thunderstorm
in spring, the scent of birch-trees, violets, mushrooms, and thyme, that I
could no longer remain in the britchka. Jumping out, I ran to some bushes,
and, regardless of the showers of drops discharged upon me, tore off a few
sprigs of thyme, and buried my face in them to smell their glorious scent.</p>
<p>Then, despite the mud which had got into my boots, as also the fact that
my stockings were soaked, I went skipping through the puddles to the
window of the carriage.</p>
<p>"Lubotshka! Katenka!" I shouted as I handed them some of the thyme, "Just
look how delicious this is!"</p>
<p>The girls smelt it and cried, "A-ah!" but Mimi shrieked to me to go away,
for fear I should be run over by the wheels.</p>
<p>"Oh, but smell how delicious it is!" I persisted.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"></SPAN></p>
<h2> III. A NEW POINT OF VIEW </h2>
<p>Katenka was with me in the britchka; her lovely head inclined as she gazed
pensively at the roadway. I looked at her in silence and wondered what had
brought the unchildlike expression of sadness to her face which I now
observed for the first time there.</p>
<p>"We shall soon be in Moscow," I said at last. "How large do you suppose it
is?"</p>
<p>"I don't know," she replied.</p>
<p>"Well, but how large do you IMAGINE? As large as Serpukhov?"</p>
<p>"What do you say?"</p>
<p>"Nothing."</p>
<p>Yet the instinctive feeling which enables one person to guess the thoughts
of another and serves as a guiding thread in conversation soon made
Katenka feel that her indifference was disagreeable to me; wherefore she
raised her head presently, and, turning round, said:</p>
<p>"Did your Papa tell you that we girls too were going to live at your
Grandmamma's?"</p>
<p>"Yes, he said that we should ALL live there."</p>
<p>"ALL live there?"</p>
<p>"Yes, of course. We shall have one half of the upper floor, and you the
other half, and Papa the wing; but we shall all of us dine together with
Grandmamma downstairs."</p>
<p>"But Mamma says that your Grandmamma is so very grave and so easily made
angry?"</p>
<p>"No, she only SEEMS like that at first. She is grave, but not
bad-tempered. On the contrary, she is both kind and cheerful. If you could
only have seen the ball at her house!"</p>
<p>"All the same, I am afraid of her. Besides, who knows whether we—"</p>
<p>Katenka stopped short, and once again became thoughtful.</p>
<p>"What?" I asked with some anxiety.</p>
<p>"Nothing, I only said that—"</p>
<p>"No. You said, 'Who knows whether we—'"</p>
<p>"And YOU said, didn't you, that once there was ever such a ball at
Grandmamma's?"</p>
<p>"Yes. It is a pity you were not there. There were heaps of guests—about
a thousand people, and all of them princes or generals, and there was
music, and I danced—But, Katenka" I broke off, "you are not
listening to me?"</p>
<p>"Oh yes, I am listening. You said that you danced—?"</p>
<p>"Why are you so serious?"</p>
<p>"Well, one cannot ALWAYS be gay."</p>
<p>"But you have changed tremendously since Woloda and I first went to
Moscow. Tell me the truth, now: why are you so odd?" My tone was resolute.</p>
<p>"AM I so odd?" said Katenka with an animation which showed me that my
question had interested her. "I don't see that I am so at all."</p>
<p>"Well, you are not the same as you were before," I continued. "Once upon a
time any one could see that you were our equal in everything, and that you
loved us like relations, just as we did you; but now you are always
serious, and keep yourself apart from us."</p>
<p>"Oh, not at all."</p>
<p>"But let me finish, please," I interrupted, already conscious of a slight
tickling in my nose—the precursor of the tears which usually came to
my eyes whenever I had to vent any long pent-up feeling. "You avoid us,
and talk to no one but Mimi, as though you had no wish for our further
acquaintance."</p>
<p>"But one cannot always remain the same—one must change a little
sometimes," replied Katenka, who had an inveterate habit of pleading some
such fatalistic necessity whenever she did not know what else to say.</p>
<p>I recollect that once, when having a quarrel with Lubotshka, who had
called her "a stupid girl," she (Katenka) retorted that EVERYBODY could
not be wise, seeing that a certain number of stupid people was a necessity
in the world. However, on the present occasion, I was not satisfied that
any such inevitable necessity for "changing sometimes" existed, and asked
further:</p>
<p>"WHY is it necessary?"</p>
<p>"Well, you see, we MAY not always go on living together as we are doing
now," said Katenka, colouring slightly, and regarding Philip's back with a
grave expression on her face. "My Mamma was able to live with your mother
because she was her friend; but will a similar arrangement always suit the
Countess, who, they say, is so easily offended? Besides, in any case, we
shall have to separate SOME day. You are rich—you have Petrovskoe,
while we are poor—Mamma has nothing."</p>
<p>"You are rich," "we are poor"—both the words and the ideas which
they connoted seemed to me extremely strange. Hitherto, I had conceived
that only beggars and peasants were poor and could not reconcile in my
mind the idea of poverty and the graceful, charming Katenka. I felt that
Mimi and her daughter ought to live with us ALWAYS and to share everything
that we possessed. Things ought never to be otherwise. Yet, at this
moment, a thousand new thoughts with regard to their lonely position came
crowding into my head, and I felt so remorseful at the notion that we were
rich and they poor, that I coloured up and could not look Katenka in the
face.</p>
<p>"Yet what does it matter," I thought, "that we are well off and they are
not? Why should that necessitate a separation? Why should we not share in
common what we possess?" Yet, I had a feeling that I could not talk to
Katenka on the subject, since a certain practical instinct, opposed to all
logical reasoning, warned me that, right though she possibly was, I should
do wrong to tell her so.</p>
<p>"It is impossible that you should leave us. How could we ever live apart?"</p>
<p>"Yet what else is there to be done? Certainly I do not WANT to do it; yet,
if it HAS to be done, I know what my plan in life will be."</p>
<p>"Yes, to become an actress! How absurd!" I exclaimed (for I knew that to
enter that profession had always been her favourite dream).</p>
<p>"Oh no. I only used to say that when I was a little girl."</p>
<p>"Well, then? What?"</p>
<p>"To go into a convent and live there. Then I could walk out in a black
dress and velvet cap!" cried Katenka.</p>
<p>Has it ever befallen you, my readers, to become suddenly aware that your
conception of things has altered—as though every object in life had
unexpectedly turned a side towards you of which you had hitherto remained
unaware? Such a species of moral change occurred, as regards myself,
during this journey, and therefore from it I date the beginning of my
boyhood. For the first time in my life, I then envisaged the idea that we—i.e.
our family—were not the only persons in the world; that not every
conceivable interest was centred in ourselves; and that there existed
numbers of people who had nothing in common with us, cared nothing for us,
and even knew nothing of our existence. No doubt I had known all this
before—only I had not known it then as I knew it now; I had never
properly felt or understood it.</p>
<p>Thought merges into conviction through paths of its own, as well as,
sometimes, with great suddenness and by methods wholly different from
those which have brought other intellects to the same conclusion. For me
the conversation with Katenka—striking deeply as it did, and forcing
me to reflect on her future position—constituted such a path. As I
gazed at the towns and villages through which we passed, and in each house
of which lived at least one family like our own, as well as at the women
and children who stared with curiosity at our carriages and then became
lost to sight for ever, and the peasants and workmen who did not even look
at us, much less make us any obeisance, the question arose for the first
time in my thoughts, "Whom else do they care for if not for us?" And this
question was followed by others, such as, "To what end do they live?" "How
do they educate their children?" "Do they teach their children and let
them play? What are their names?" and so forth.</p>
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<h2> IV. IN MOSCOW </h2>
<p>From the time of our arrival in Moscow, the change in my conception of
objects, of persons, and of my connection with them became increasingly
perceptible. When at my first meeting with Grandmamma, I saw her thin,
wrinkled face and faded eyes, the mingled respect and fear with which she
had hitherto inspired me gave place to compassion, and when, laying her
cheek against Lubotshka's head, she sobbed as though she saw before her
the corpse of her beloved daughter, my compassion grew to love.</p>
<p>I felt deeply sorry to see her grief at our meeting, even though I knew
that in ourselves we represented nothing in her eyes, but were dear to her
only as reminders of our mother—that every kiss which she imprinted
upon my cheeks expressed the one thought, "She is no more—she is
dead, and I shall never see her again."</p>
<p>Papa, who took little notice of us here in Moscow, and whose face was
perpetually preoccupied on the rare occasions when he came in his black
dress-coat to take formal dinner with us, lost much in my eyes at this
period, in spite of his turned-up ruffles, robes de chambre, overseers,
bailiffs, expeditions to the estate, and hunting exploits.</p>
<p>Karl Ivanitch—whom Grandmamma always called "Uncle," and who (Heaven
knows why!) had taken it into his head to adorn the bald pate of my
childhood's days with a red wig parted in the middle—now looked to
me so strange and ridiculous that I wondered how I could ever have failed
to observe the fact before. Even between the girls and ourselves there
seemed to have sprung up an invisible barrier. They, too, began to have
secrets among themselves, as well as to evince a desire to show off their
ever-lengthening skirts even as we boys did our trousers and ankle-straps.
As for Mimi, she appeared at luncheon, the first Sunday, in such a
gorgeous dress and with so many ribbons in her cap that it was clear that
we were no longer en campagne, and that everything was now going to be
different.</p>
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