PAGE 6
The Cemetery
by
The day had been a Sunday, and the hour eventide. On the burnt plot of ground some broken glass had been emitting a reddish gleam, shoots of ergot had been diffusing their gloss, children shouting at play, dogs trotting backwards and forwards, and all things, seemingly, faring well, sunken in the stillness of the portion of the town adjoining the rolling, vacant steppe, with, above them, only the sky’s level, dull-blue canopy, and around them, only the cemetery, like an island amidst a sea.
With Virubov, I had been sitting on a bench near the wicket-gate of his hut, as intermittently he had screwed his lecherous eyes in the direction of the stout, ox-eyed lacemaker, Madame Ezhov, who, after disposing of her form on a bank hard-by, had fallen to picking lice out of the curls of her eight-year-old Petka Koshkodav. Presently, as swiftly she had rummaged the boy’s hair with fingers grown used to such rapid movement, she had said to her husband (a dealer in second-hand articles), who had been seated within doors, and therefore rendered invisible–she had said with oily derision:
“Oh, yes, you bald-headed old devil, you! Of course you got your price. Ye-es. Then, fool, you ought to have had a slipper smacked across that Kalmuck snout of yours. Talk of my price, indeed!”
Upon this Virubov had remarked with a sigh, and in sluggish, sententious tones:
“To grant the serfs emancipation was a sheer mistake. I am a humble enough servant of my country, yet I can see the truth of what I have stated, since it follows as a matter of course. What ought to have been done is that all the estates of the landowners should have been conveyed to the Tsar. Beyond a doubt that is so. Then both the peasantry and the townsfolk, the whole people, in short, would have had but a single landlord. For never can the people live properly so long as it is ignorant of the point where it stands; and since it loves authority, it loves to have over it an autocratic force, for its control. Always can it be seen seeking such a force.”
Then, bending forward, and infusing into each softly uttered word a perfect lusciousness of falsity, Virubov had added to his neighbour:
“Take, for example, the working-woman who stands free of every tie.”
“How do I stand free of anything?” the neighbour had retorted, in complete readiness for a quarrel.
“Oh, I am not speaking in your despite, Pavlushka, but to your credit,” hastily Virubov had protested.
“Then keep your blandishments for that heifer, your ‘niece,'” had been Madame Ezhov’s response.
Upon this Virubov had risen heavily, and remarked as he moved away towards the courtyard:
“All folk need to be supervised by an autocratic eye.”
Thereafter had followed a bout of choice abuse between his neighbour and his ” niece,”while Virubov himself, framed in the wicket-gate, and listening to the contest, had smacked his lips as he gazed at the pair, and particularly at Madame Ezhov. At the beginning of the bout Dikanka had screeched:
“It is my opinion, it is my opinion, that–“
“Don’t treat me to any of YOUR slop!” the long-fanged Pavla had interrupted for the benefit of the street in general. And thus had the affair continued….
Lieutenant Khorvat blew the fag-end of his cigarette from his mouthpiece, glanced at me, and said with seemingly, a not over-civil, twitch of his bushy moustache:
“Of what are you thinking, if I might inquire?”
“I am trying to understand you.”
“You ought not to find that difficult,” was his rejoinder as again he doffed his hat, and fanned his face with it. “The whole thing may be summed up in two words. It is that we lack respect both for ourselves and for our fellow men. Do you follow me NOW?”
His eyes had grown once more young and clear, and, seizing my hand in his strong and agreeably warm fingers, he continued:
“Why so? For the very simple reason that I cannot respect myself when I can learn nothing, simply nothing, about my fellows.”