The Lady With The Dog by Anton Chekhov
"Life is one long insane trip. Some people
just have better directions"
-Donnie Darko (2001)
I
IT was said
that a new person had appeared on the sea-front: a lady with a little dog.
Dmitri Dmitritch Gurov, who had by then been a fortnight at Yalta, and so was
fairly at home there, had begun to take an interest in new arrivals. Sitting in
Verney's pavilion, he saw, walking on the sea-front, a fair-haired young lady
of medium height, wearing a béret; a white Pomeranian dog was running behind
her.
And afterwards he met her in the
public gardens and in the square several times a day. She was walking alone,
always wearing the same béret, and always with the same white dog; no one knew
who she was, and every one called her simply "the lady with the dog."
"If she is here alone without a
husband or friends, it wouldn't be amiss to make her acquaintance," Gurov
reflected.
He was under forty, but he had a
daughter already twelve years old, and two sons at school. He had been married
young, when he was a student in his second year, and by now his wife seemed
half as old again as he. She was a tall, erect woman with dark eyebrows, staid
and dignified, and, as she said of herself, intellectual. She read a great
deal, used phonetic spelling, called her husband, not Dmitri, but Dimitri, and
he secretly considered her unintelligent, narrow, inelegant, was afraid of her,
and did not like to be at home. He had begun being unfaithful to her long ago
-- had been unfaithful to her often, and, probably on that account, almost
always spoke ill of women, and when they were talked about in his presence,
used to call them "the lower race."
It seemed to him that he had been so schooled by bitter experience that he
might call them what he liked, and yet he could not get on for two days
together without "the lower race." In the society of men he was bored
and not himself, with them he was cold and uncommunicative; but when he was in
the company of women he felt free, and knew what to say to them and how to
behave; and he was at ease with them even when he was silent. In his
appearance, in his character, in his whole nature, there was something
attractive and elusive which allured women and disposed them in his favour; he
knew that, and some force seemed to draw him, too, to them.
Experience often repeated, truly bitter experience, had taught him long ago
that with decent people, especially Moscow people -- always slow to move and
irresolute -- every intimacy, which at first so agreeably diversifies life and
appears a light and charming adventure, inevitably grows into a regular problem
of extreme intricacy, and in the long run the situation becomes unbearable. But
at every fresh meeting with an interesting woman this experience seemed to slip
out of his memory, and he was eager for life, and everything seemed simple and
amusing.
One evening he was dining in the gardens, and the lady in the béret came up
slowly to take the next table. Her expression, her gait, her dress, and the way
she did her hair told him that she was a lady, that she was married, that she
was in Yalta for the first time and alone, and that she was dull there. . . .
The stories told of the immorality in such places as Yalta are to a great
extent untrue; he despised them, and knew that such stories were for the most
part made up by persons who would themselves have been glad to sin if they had
been able; but when the lady sat down at the next table three paces from him,
he remembered these tales of easy conquests, of trips to the mountains, and the
tempting thought of a swift, fleeting love affair, a romance with an unknown
woman, whose name he did not know, suddenly took possession of him.
He beckoned coaxingly to the Pomeranian, and when the dog came up to him he
shook his finger at it. The Pomeranian growled: Gurov shook his finger at it
again.
The lady looked at him and at once dropped her eyes.
"He doesn't bite," she said, and blushed.
"May I give him a bone?" he asked; and when she nodded he asked
courteously, "Have you been long in Yalta?"
"Five days."
"And I have already dragged out a fortnight here."
There was a brief silence.
"Time goes fast, and yet it is so dull here!" she said, not looking
at him.
"That's only the fashion to say it is dull here. A provincial will live in
Belyov or Zhidra and not be dull, and when he comes here it's 'Oh, the dulness!
Oh, the dust!' One would think he came from Grenada."
She laughed. Then both continued eating in silence, like strangers, but after dinner
they walked side by side; and there sprang up between them the light jesting
conversation of people who are free and satisfied, to whom it does not matter
where they go or what they talk about. They walked and talked of the strange
light on the sea: the water was of a soft warm lilac hue, and there was a
golden streak from the moon upon it. They talked of how sultry it was after a
hot day. Gurov told her that he came from Moscow, that he had taken his degree
in Arts, but had a post in a bank; that he had trained as an opera-singer, but
had given it up, that he owned two houses in Moscow. . . . And from her he
learnt that she had grown up in Petersburg, but had lived in S---- since her
marriage two years before, that she was staying another month in Yalta, and
that her husband, who needed a holiday too, might perhaps come and fetch her.
She was not sure whether her husband had a post in a Crown Department or under
the Provincial Council -- and was amused by her own ignorance. And Gurov
learnt, too, that she was called Anna Sergeyevna.
Afterwards he thought about her in his room at the hotel -- thought she would
certainly meet him next day; it would be sure to happen. As he got into bed he
thought how lately she had been a girl at school, doing lessons like his own
daughter; he recalled the diffidence, the angularity, that was still manifest
in her laugh and her manner of talking with a stranger. This must have been the
first time in her life she had been alone in surroundings in which she was
followed, looked at, and spoken to merely from a secret motive which she could
hardly fail to guess. He recalled her slender, delicate neck, her lovely grey
eyes.
"There's something pathetic about her, anyway," he thought, and fell
asleep.
II
A week had passed since they had made acquaintance. It was a holiday. It was
sultry indoors, while in the street the wind whirled the dust round and round,
and blew people's hats off. It was a thirsty day, and Gurov often went into the
pavilion, and pressed Anna Sergeyevna to have syrup and water or an ice. One
did not know what to do with oneself.
In the evening when the wind had dropped a little, they went out on the groyne
to see the steamer come in. There were a great many people walking about the
harbour; they had gathered to welcome some one, bringing bouquets. And two
peculiarities of a well-dressed Yalta crowd were very conspicuous: the elderly
ladies were dressed like young ones, and there were great numbers of generals.
Owing to the roughness of the sea, the steamer arrived late, after the sun had
set, and it was a long time turning about before it reached the groyne. Anna
Sergeyevna looked through her lorgnette at the steamer and the passengers as
though looking for acquaintances, and when she turned to Gurov her eyes were
shining. She talked a great deal and asked disconnected questions, forgetting
next moment what she had asked; then she dropped her lorgnette in the crush.
The festive crowd began to disperse; it was too dark to see people's faces. The
wind had completely dropped, but Gurov and Anna Sergeyevna still stood as
though waiting to see some one else come from the steamer. Anna Sergeyevna was
silent now, and sniffed the flowers without looking at Gurov.
"The weather is better this evening," he said. "Where shall we
go now? Shall we drive somewhere?"
She made no answer.
Then he looked at her intently, and all at once put his arm round her and
kissed her on the lips, and breathed in the moisture and the fragrance of the
flowers; and he immediately looked round him, anxiously wondering whether any
one had seen them.
"Let us go to your hotel," he said softly. And both walked quickly.
The room was close and smelt of the scent she had bought at the Japanese shop.
Gurov looked at her and thought: "What different people one meets in the
world!" From the past he preserved memories of careless, good-natured
women, who loved cheerfully and were grateful to him for the happiness he gave
them, however brief it might be; and of women like his wife who loved without
any genuine feeling, with superfluous phrases, affectedly, hysterically, with
an expression that suggested that it was not love nor passion, but something
more significant; and of two or three others, very beautiful, cold women, on
whose faces he had caught a glimpse of a rapacious expression -- an obstinate
desire to snatch from life more than it could give, and these were capricious,
unreflecting, domineering, unintelligent women not in their first youth, and
when Gurov grew cold to them their beauty excited his hatred, and the lace on
their linen seemed to him like scales.
But in this case there was still the diffidence, the angularity of
inexperienced youth, an awkward feeling; and there was a sense of consternation
as though some one had suddenly knocked at the door. The attitude of Anna
Sergeyevna -- "the lady with the dog" -- to what had happened was
somehow peculiar, very grave, as though it were her fall -- so it seemed, and
it was strange and inappropriate. Her face dropped and faded, and on both sides
of it her long hair hung down mournfully; she mused in a dejected attitude like
"the woman who was a sinner" in an old-fashioned picture.
"It's wrong," she said. "You will be the first to despise me
now."
There was a water-melon on the table. Gurov cut himself a slice and began
eating it without haste. There followed at least half an hour of silence.
Anna Sergeyevna was touching; there was about her the purity of a good, simple
woman who had seen little of life. The solitary candle burning on the table
threw a faint light on her face, yet it was clear that she was very unhappy.
"How could I despise you?" asked Gurov. "You don't know what you
are saying."
"God forgive me," she said, and her eyes filled with tears.
"It's awful."
"You seem to feel you need to be forgiven."
"Forgiven? No. I am a bad, low woman; I despise myself and don't attempt
to justify myself. It's not my husband but myself I have deceived. And not only
just now; I have been deceiving myself for a long time. My husband may be a
good, honest man, but he is a flunkey! I don't know what he does there, what
his work is, but I know he is a flunkey! I was twenty when I was married to
him. I have been tormented by curiosity; I wanted something better. 'There must
be a different sort of life,' I said to myself. I wanted to live! To live, to
live! . . . I was fired by curiosity . . . you don't understand it, but, I
swear to God, I could not control myself; something happened to me: I could not
be restrained. I told my husband I was ill, and came here. . . . And here I
have been walking about as though I were dazed, like a mad creature; . . . and
now I have become a vulgar, contemptible woman whom any one may despise."
Gurov felt bored already, listening to her. He was irritated by the naïve tone,
by this remorse, so unexpected and inopportune; but for the tears in her eyes,
he might have thought she was jesting or playing a part.
"I don't understand," he said softly. "What is it you
want?"
She hid her face on his breast and pressed close to him.
"Believe me, believe me, I beseech you . . ." she said. "I love
a pure, honest life, and sin is loathsome to me. I don't know what I am doing.
Simple people say: 'The Evil One has beguiled me.' And I may say of myself now
that the Evil One has beguiled me."
"Hush, hush! . . ." he muttered.
He looked at her fixed, scared eyes, kissed her, talked softly and
affectionately, and by degrees she was comforted, and her gaiety returned; they
both began laughing.
Afterwards when they went out there was not a soul on the sea-front. The town
with its cypresses had quite a deathlike air, but the sea still broke noisily
on the shore; a single barge was rocking on the waves, and a lantern was
blinking sleepily on it.
They found a cab and drove to Oreanda.
"I found out your surname in the hall just now: it was written on the
board -- Von Diderits," said Gurov. "Is your husband a German?"
"No; I believe his grandfather was a German, but he is an Orthodox Russian
himself."
At Oreanda they sat on a seat not far from the church, looked down at the sea,
and were silent. Yalta was hardly visible through the morning mist; white
clouds stood motionless on the mountain-tops. The leaves did not stir on the
trees, grasshoppers chirruped, and the monotonous hollow sound of the sea
rising up from below, spoke of the peace, of the eternal sleep awaiting us. So
it must have sounded when there was no Yalta, no Oreanda here; so it sounds
now, and it will sound as indifferently and monotonously when we are all no
more. And in this constancy, in this complete indifference to the life and
death of each of us, there lies hid, perhaps, a pledge of our eternal
salvation, of the unceasing movement of life upon earth, of unceasing progress
towards perfection. Sitting beside a young woman who in the dawn seemed so
lovely, soothed and spellbound in these magical surroundings -- the sea,
mountains, clouds, the open sky -- Gurov thought how in reality everything is
beautiful in this world when one reflects: everything except what we think or
do ourselves when we forget our human dignity and the higher aims of our
existence.
A man walked up to them -- probably a keeper -- looked at them and walked away.
And this detail seemed mysterious and beautiful, too. They saw a steamer come
from Theodosia, with its lights out in the glow of dawn.
"There is dew on the grass," said Anna Sergeyevna, after a silence.
"Yes. It's time to go home."
They went back to the town.
Then they met every day at twelve o'clock on the sea-front, lunched and dined
together, went for walks, admired the sea. She complained that she slept badly,
that her heart throbbed violently; asked the same questions, troubled now by
jealousy and now by the fear that he did not respect her sufficiently. And
often in the square or gardens, when there was no one near them, he suddenly
drew her to him and kissed her passionately. Complete idleness, these kisses in
broad daylight while he looked round in dread of some one's seeing them, the
heat, the smell of the sea, and the continual passing to and fro before him of
idle, well-dressed, well-fed people, made a new man of him; he told Anna
Sergeyevna how beautiful she was, how fascinating. He was impatiently
passionate, he would not move a step away from her, while she was often pensive
and continually urged him to confess that he did not respect her, did not love
her in the least, and thought of her as nothing but a common woman. Rather late
almost every evening they drove somewhere out of town, to Oreanda or to the
waterfall; and the expedition was always a success, the scenery invariably
impressed them as grand and beautiful.
They were expecting her husband to come, but a letter came from him, saying
that there was something wrong with his eyes, and he entreated his wife to come
home as quickly as possible. Anna Sergeyevna made haste to go.
"It's a good thing I am going away," she said to Gurov. "It's
the finger of destiny!"
She went by coach and he went with her. They were driving the whole day. When
she had got into a compartment of the express, and when the second bell had
rung, she said:
"Let me look at you once more . . . look at you once again. That's
right."
She did not shed tears, but was so sad that she seemed ill, and her face was
quivering.
"I shall remember you . . . think of you," she said. "God be
with you; be happy. Don't remember evil against me. We are parting forever --
it must be so, for we ought never to have met. Well, God be with you."
The train moved off rapidly, its lights soon vanished from sight, and a minute
later there was no sound of it, as though everything had conspired together to
end as quickly as possible that sweet delirium, that madness. Left alone on the
platform, and gazing into the dark distance, Gurov listened to the chirrup of
the grasshoppers and the hum of the telegraph wires, feeling as though he had
only just waked up. And he thought, musing, that there had been another episode
or adventure in his life, and it, too, was at an end, and nothing was left of it
but a memory. . . . He was moved, sad, and conscious of a slight remorse. This
young woman whom he would never meet again had not been happy with him; he was
genuinely warm and affectionate with her, but yet in his manner, his tone, and
his caresses there had been a shade of light irony, the coarse condescension of
a happy man who was, besides, almost twice her age. All the time she had called
him kind, exceptional, lofty; obviously he had seemed to her different from
what he really was, so he had unintentionally deceived her. . . .
Here at the station was already a scent of autumn; it was a cold evening.
"It's time for me to go north," thought Gurov as he left the
platform. "High time!"
III
At home in Moscow everything was in its winter routine; the stoves were heated,
and in the morning it was still dark when the children were having breakfast
and getting ready for school, and the nurse would light the lamp for a short
time. The frosts had begun already. When the first snow has fallen, on the first
day of sledge-driving it is pleasant to see the white earth, the white roofs,
to draw soft, delicious breath, and the season brings back the days of one's
youth. The old limes and birches, white with hoar-frost, have a good-natured
expression; they are nearer to one's heart than cypresses and palms, and near
them one doesn't want to be thinking of the sea and the mountains.
Gurov was Moscow born; he arrived in Moscow on a fine frosty day, and when he
put on his fur coat and warm gloves, and walked along Petrovka, and when on
Saturday evening he heard the ringing of the bells, his recent trip and the
places he had seen lost all charm for him. Little by little he became absorbed
in Moscow life, greedily read three newspapers a day, and declared he did not read
the Moscow papers on principle! He already felt a longing to go to restaurants,
clubs, dinner-parties, anniversary celebrations, and he felt flattered at
entertaining distinguished lawyers and artists, and at playing cards with a
professor at the doctors' club. He could already eat a whole plateful of salt
fish and cabbage.
In another month, he fancied, the image of Anna Sergeyevna would be shrouded in
a mist in his memory, and only from time to time would visit him in his dreams
with a touching smile as others did. But more than a month passed, real winter
had come, and everything was still clear in his memory as though he had parted
with Anna Sergeyevna only the day before. And his memories glowed more and more
vividly. When in the evening stillness he heard from his study the voices of
his children, preparing their lessons, or when he listened to a song or the
organ at the restaurant, or the storm howled in the chimney, suddenly
everything would rise up in his memory: what had happened on the groyne, and
the early morning with the mist on the mountains, and the steamer coming from
Theodosia, and the kisses. He would pace a long time about his room,
remembering it all and smiling; then his memories passed into dreams, and in
his fancy the past was mingled with what was to come. Anna Sergeyevna did not
visit him in dreams, but followed him about everywhere like a shadow and
haunted him. When he shut his eyes he saw her as though she were living before
him, and she seemed to him lovelier, younger, tenderer than she was; and he
imagined himself finer than he had been in Yalta. In the evenings she peeped
out at him from the bookcase, from the fireplace, from the corner -- he heard
her breathing, the caressing rustle of her dress. In the street he watched the women,
looking for some one like her.
He was tormented by an intense desire to confide his memories to some one. But
in his home it was impossible to talk of his love, and he had no one outside;
he could not talk to his tenants nor to any one at the bank. And what had he to
talk of? Had he been in love, then? Had there been anything beautiful,
poetical, or edifying or simply interesting in his relations with Anna
Sergeyevna? And there was nothing for him but to talk vaguely of love, of
woman, and no one guessed what it meant; only his wife twitched her black
eyebrows, and said:
"The part of a lady-killer does not suit you at all, Dimitri."
One evening, coming out of the doctors' club with an official with whom he had
been playing cards, he could not resist saying:
"If only you knew what a fascinating woman I made the acquaintance of in
Yalta!"
The official got into his sledge and was driving away, but turned suddenly and
shouted:
"Dmitri Dmitritch!"
"What?"
"You were right this evening: the sturgeon was a bit too strong!"
These words, so ordinary, for some reason moved Gurov to indignation, and
struck him as degrading and unclean. What savage manners, what people! What
senseless nights, what uninteresting, uneventful days! The rage for card-playing,
the gluttony, the drunkenness, the continual talk always about the same thing.
Useless pursuits and conversations always about the same things absorb the
better part of one's time, the better part of one's strength, and in the end
there is left a life grovelling and curtailed, worthless and trivial, and there
is no escaping or getting away from it -- just as though one were in a madhouse
or a prison.
Gurov did not sleep all night, and was filled with indignation. And he had a
headache all next day. And the next night he slept badly; he sat up in bed,
thinking, or paced up and down his room. He was sick of his children, sick of
the bank; he had no desire to go anywhere or to talk of anything.
In the holidays in December he prepared for a journey, and told his wife he was
going to Petersburg to do something in the interests of a young friend -- and
he set off for S----. What for? He did not very well know himself. He wanted to
see Anna Sergeyevna and to talk with her -- to arrange a meeting, if possible.
He reached S---- in the morning, and took the best room at the hotel, in which
the floor was covered with grey army cloth, and on the table was an inkstand,
grey with dust and adorned with a figure on horseback, with its hat in its hand
and its head broken off. The hotel porter gave him the necessary information;
Von Diderits lived in a house of his own in Old Gontcharny Street -- it was not
far from the hotel: he was rich and lived in good style, and had his own
horses; every one in the town knew him. The porter pronounced the name
"Dridirits."
Gurov went without haste to Old Gontcharny Street and found the house. Just
opposite the house stretched a long grey fence adorned with nails.
"One would run away from a fence like that," thought Gurov, looking
from the fence to the windows of the house and back again.
He considered: to-day was a holiday, and the husband would probably be at home.
And in any case it would be tactless to go into the house and upset her. If he
were to send her a note it might fall into her husband's hands, and then it
might ruin everything. The best thing was to trust to chance. And he kept
walking up and down the street by the fence, waiting for the chance. He saw a
beggar go in at the gate and dogs fly at him; then an hour later he heard a
piano, and the sounds were faint and indistinct. Probably it was Anna
Sergeyevna playing. The front door suddenly opened, and an old woman came out,
followed by the familiar white Pomeranian. Gurov was on the point of calling to
the dog, but his heart began beating violently, and in his excitement he could
not remember the dog's name.
He walked up and down, and loathed the grey fence more and more, and by now he
thought irritably that Anna Sergeyevna had forgotten him, and was perhaps already
amusing herself with some one else, and that that was very natural in a young
woman who had nothing to look at from morning till night but that confounded
fence. He went back to his hotel room and sat for a long while on the sofa, not
knowing what to do, then he had dinner and a long nap.
"How stupid and worrying it is!" he thought when he woke and looked
at the dark windows: it was already evening. "Here I've had a good sleep
for some reason. What shall I do in the night?"
He sat on the bed, which was covered by a cheap grey blanket, such as one sees
in hospitals, and he taunted himself in his vexation:
"So much for the lady with the dog . . . so much for the adventure. . . .
You're in a nice fix. . . ."
That morning at the station a poster in large letters had caught his eye.
"The Geisha" was to be performed for the first time. He thought of
this and went to the theatre.
"It's quite possible she may go to the first performance," he
thought.
The theatre was full. As in all provincial theatres, there was a fog above the
chandelier, the gallery was noisy and restless; in the front row the local
dandies were standing up before the beginning of the performance, with their
hands behind them; in the Governor's box the Governor's daughter, wearing a
boa, was sitting in the front seat, while the Governor himself lurked modestly
behind the curtain with only his hands visible; the orchestra was a long time
tuning up; the stage curtain swayed. All the time the audience were coming in
and taking their seats Gurov looked at them eagerly.
Anna Sergeyevna, too, came in. She sat down in the third row, and when Gurov
looked at her his heart contracted, and he understood clearly that for him
there was in the whole world no creature so near, so precious, and so important
to him; she, this little woman, in no way remarkable, lost in a provincial
crowd, with a vulgar lorgnette in her hand, filled his whole life now, was his
sorrow and his joy, the one happiness that he now desired for himself, and to
the sounds of the inferior orchestra, of the wretched provincial violins, he
thought how lovely she was. He thought and dreamed.
A young man with small side-whiskers, tall and stooping, came in with Anna
Sergeyevna and sat down beside her; he bent his head at every step and seemed
to be continually bowing. Most likely this was the husband whom at Yalta, in a
rush of bitter feeling, she had called a flunkey. And there really was in his
long figure, his side-whiskers, and the small bald patch on his head, something
of the flunkey's obsequiousness; his smile was sugary, and in his buttonhole
there was some badge of distinction like the number on a waiter.
During the first interval the husband went away to smoke; she remained alone in
her stall. Gurov, who was sitting in the stalls, too, went up to her and said
in a trembling voice, with a forced smile:
"Good-evening."
She glanced at him and turned pale, then glanced again with horror, unable to
believe her eyes, and tightly gripped the fan and the lorgnette in her hands,
evidently struggling with herself not to faint. Both were silent. She was
sitting, he was standing, frightened by her confusion and not venturing to sit
down beside her. The violins and the flute began tuning up. He felt suddenly
frightened; it seemed as though all the people in the boxes were looking at
them. She got up and went quickly to the door; he followed her, and both walked
senselessly along passages, and up and down stairs, and figures in legal,
scholastic, and civil service uniforms, all wearing badges, flitted before
their eyes. They caught glimpses of ladies, of fur coats hanging on pegs; the
draughts blew on them, bringing a smell of stale tobacco. And Gurov, whose
heart was beating violently, thought:
"Oh, heavens! Why are these people here and this orchestra! . . ."
And at that instant he recalled how when he had seen Anna Sergeyevna off at the
station he had thought that everything was over and they would never meet
again. But how far they were still from the end!
On the narrow, gloomy staircase over which was written "To the
Amphitheatre," she stopped.
"How you have frightened me!" she said, breathing hard, still pale
and overwhelmed. "Oh, how you have frightened me! I am half dead. Why have
you come? Why?"
"But do understand, Anna, do understand . . ." he said hastily in a
low voice. "I entreat you to understand. . . ."
She looked at him with dread, with entreaty, with love; she looked at him
intently, to keep his features more distinctly in her memory.
"I am so unhappy," she went on, not heeding him. "I have thought
of nothing but you all the time; I live only in the thought of you. And I
wanted to forget, to forget you; but why, oh, why, have you come?"
On the landing above them two schoolboys were smoking and looking down, but
that was nothing to Gurov; he drew Anna Sergeyevna to him, and began kissing
her face, her cheeks, and her hands.
"What are you doing, what are you doing!" she cried in horror,
pushing him away. "We are mad. Go away to-day; go away at once. . . . I
beseech you by all that is sacred, I implore you. . . . There are people coming
this way!"
Some one was coming up the stairs.
"You must go away," Anna Sergeyevna went on in a whisper. "Do
you hear, Dmitri Dmitritch? I will come and see you in Moscow. I have never
been happy; I am miserable now, and I never, never shall be happy, never! Don't
make me suffer still more! I swear I'll come to Moscow. But now let us part. My
precious, good, dear one, we must part!"
She pressed his hand and began rapidly going downstairs, looking round at him,
and from her eyes he could see that she really was unhappy. Gurov stood for a
little while, listened, then, when all sound had died away, he found his coat
and left the theatre.
IV
And Anna Sergeyevna began coming to see him in Moscow. Once in two or three
months she left S----, telling her husband that she was going to consult a
doctor about an internal complaint -- and her husband believed her, and did not
believe her. In Moscow she stayed at the Slaviansky Bazaar hotel, and at once
sent a man in a red cap to Gurov. Gurov went to see her, and no one in Moscow
knew of it.
Once he was going to see her in this way on a winter morning (the messenger had
come the evening before when he was out). With him walked his daughter, whom he
wanted to take to school: it was on the way. Snow was falling in big wet
flakes.
"It's three degrees above freezing-point, and yet it is snowing,"
said Gurov to his daughter. "The thaw is only on the surface of the earth;
there is quite a different temperature at a greater height in the
atmosphere."
"And why are there no thunderstorms in the winter, father?"
He explained that, too. He talked, thinking all the while that he was going to
see her, and no living soul knew of it, and probably never would know. He had
two lives: one, open, seen and known by all who cared to know, full of relative
truth and of relative falsehood, exactly like the lives of his friends and
acquaintances; and another life running its course in secret. And through some
strange, perhaps accidental, conjunction of circumstances, everything that was
essential, of interest and of value to him, everything in which he was sincere
and did not deceive himself, everything that made the kernel of his life, was
hidden from other people; and all that was false in him, the sheath in which he
hid himself to conceal the truth -- such, for instance, as his work in the
bank, his discussions at the club, his "lower race," his presence
with his wife at anniversary festivities -- all that was open. And he judged of
others by himself, not believing in what he saw, and always believing that
every man had his real, most interesting life under the cover of secrecy and
under the cover of night. All personal life rested on secrecy, and possibly it
was partly on that account that civilised man was so nervously anxious that
personal privacy should be respected.
After leaving his daughter at school, Gurov went on to the Slaviansky Bazaar.
He took off his fur coat below, went upstairs, and softly knocked at the door.
Anna Sergeyevna, wearing his favourite grey dress, exhausted by the journey and
the suspense, had been expecting him since the evening before. She was pale;
she looked at him, and did not smile, and he had hardly come in when she fell
on his breast. Their kiss was slow and prolonged, as though they had not met
for two years.
"Well, how are you getting on there?" he asked. "What
news?"
"Wait; I'll tell you directly. . . . I can't talk."
She could not speak; she was crying. She turned away from him, and pressed her
handkerchief to her eyes.
"Let her have her cry out. I'll sit down and wait," he thought, and
he sat down in an arm-chair.
Then he rang and asked for tea to be brought him, and while he drank his tea
she remained standing at the window with her back to him. She was crying from
emotion, from the miserable consciousness that their life was so hard for them;
they could only meet in secret, hiding themselves from people, like thieves!
Was not their life shattered?
"Come, do stop!" he said.
It was evident to him that this love of theirs would not soon be over, that he
could not see the end of it. Anna Sergeyevna grew more and more attached to
him. She adored him, and it was unthinkable to say to her that it was bound to
have an end some day; besides, she would not have believed it!
He went up to her and took her by the shoulders to say something affectionate
and cheering, and at that moment he saw himself in the looking-glass.
His hair was already beginning to turn grey. And it seemed strange to him that
he had grown so much older, so much plainer during the last few years. The
shoulders on which his hands rested were warm and quivering. He felt compassion
for this life, still so warm and lovely, but probably already not far from
beginning to fade and wither like his own. Why did she love him so much? He
always seemed to women different from what he was, and they loved in him not
himself, but the man created by their imagination, whom they had been eagerly
seeking all their lives; and afterwards, when they noticed their mistake, they
loved him all the same. And not one of them had been happy with him. Time
passed, he had made their acquaintance, got on with them, parted, but he had
never once loved; it was anything you like, but not love.
And only now when his head was grey he had fallen properly, really in love --
for the first time in his life.
Anna Sergeyevna and he loved each other like people very close and akin, like
husband and wife, like tender friends; it seemed to them that fate itself had
meant them for one another, and they could not understand why he had a wife and
she a husband; and it was as though they were a pair of birds of passage,
caught and forced to live in different cages. They forgave each other for what
they were ashamed of in their past, they forgave everything in the present, and
felt that this love of theirs had changed them both.
In moments of depression in the past he had comforted himself with any
arguments that came into his mind, but now he no longer cared for arguments; he
felt profound compassion, he wanted to be sincere and tender. . . .
"Don't cry, my darling," he said. "You've had your cry; that's
enough. . . . Let us talk now, let us think of some plan."
Then they spent a long while taking counsel together, talked of how to avoid
the necessity for secrecy, for deception, for living in different towns and not
seeing each other for long at a time. How could they be free from this
intolerable bondage?
"How? How?" he asked, clutching his head. "How?"
And it seemed as though in a little while the solution would be found, and then
a new and splendid life would begin; and it was clear to both of them that they
had still a long, long road before them, and that the most complicated and
difficult part of it was only just beginning.
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