Read Childhood, Boyhood, Youth Page 18


  ze lot for which shoult pe Soldat. Johann drew ze fatal nomper, and me

  vas not necessary to pe Soldat. Ant Papa sayt, 'I have only vun son, ant

  wis him I must now separate!'

  "Den I take his hant, ant says, 'Why say you so, Papa? Come wis me,

  ant I will say you somesing.' Ant Papa come, ant we seat togezer at ze

  publics-house, ant me sayt, 'Vaiter, give us one Bierkrug,' ant he gives

  us one. We trink altogezer, and broser Johann also trink. 'Papa,' sayt

  me, 'ton't say zat you have only one son, ant wis it you must separate,

  My heart was breaking ven you say sis. Broser Johann must not serve;

  ME shall pe Soldat. Karl is for nopoty necessary, and Karl shall pe

  Soldat.'

  "'You is one honest man, Karl,' sayt Papa, ant kiss me. Ant me was

  Soldat."

  IX. CONTINUATION OF KARL'S NARRATIVE

  "Zat was a terrible time, Nicolinka," continued Karl Ivanitch, "ze

  time of Napoleon. He vanted to conquer Germany, ant we protected

  our Vaterland to ze last trop of plot. Me vere at Ulm, me vere at

  Austerlitz, me vere at Wagram."

  "Did you really fight?" I asked with a gaze of astonishment "Did you

  really kill anybody?"

  Karl instantly reassured me on this point,

  "Vonce one French grenadier was left behint, ant fell to ze grount.

  I sprang forvarts wis my gon, ant vere about to kill him, aber der

  Franzose warf sein Gewehr hin und rief, 'Pardon'--ant I let him loose.

  "At Wagram, Napoleon cut us open, ant surrountet us in such a way as

  zere vas no helping. Sree days hat we no provisions, ant stoot in

  ze vater op to ze knees. Ze evil Napoleon neiser let us go loose nor

  catchet us.

  "On ze fours day zey took us prisoners--zank Got! ant sent us to one

  fortress. Upon me vas one blue trousers, uniforms of very goot clos,

  fifteen of Thalers, ant one silver clock which my Vater hat given me,

  Ze Frans Soldaten took from me everysing. For my happiness zere vas

  sree tucats on me which my Mamma hat sewn in my shirt of flannel. Nopoty

  fount zem.

  "I liket not long to stay in ze fortresses, ant resoluted to ron away.

  Von day, von pig holitay, says I to the sergeant which hat to look after

  us, 'Mister Sergeant, to-day is a pig holitay, ant me vants to celeprate

  it. Pring here, if you please, two pottle Mateira, ant we shall trink

  zem wis each oser.' Ant ze sergeant says, 'Goot!' Ven ze sergeant pring

  ze Mateira ant we trink it out to ze last trop, I taket his hant

  ant says, 'Mister Sergeant, perhaps you have still one Vater and one

  Mutter?' He says, 'So I have, Mister Mayer.' 'My Vater ant Mutter not

  seen me eight year,' I goes on to him, 'ant zey know not if I am yet

  alive or if my bones be reposing in ze grave. Oh, Mister Sergeant, I

  have two tucats which is in my shirt of flannel. Take zem, ant let me

  loose! You will pe my penefactor, ant my Mutter will be praying for you

  all her life to ze Almighty Got!'

  "Ze sergeant emptiet his glass of Mateira, ant says, 'Mister Mayer, I

  loaf and pity you very much, pot you is one prisoner, ant I one soldat.'

  So I take his hant ant says, 'Mister Sergeant!'

  "Ant ze sergeant says, 'You is one poor man, ant I will not take your

  money, pot I will help you. Ven I go to sleep, puy one pail of pranty

  for ze Soldaten, ant zey will sleep. Me will not look after you.' Sis

  was one goot man. I puyet ze pail of pranty, ant ven ze Soldaten was

  trunken me tresset in one olt coat, ant gang in silence out of ze doon.

  "I go to ze wall, ant will leap down, pot zere is vater pelow, ant I

  will not spoil my last tressing, so I go to ze gate.

  "Ze sentry go up and town wis one gon, ant look at me. 'Who goes zere?'

  ant I was silent. 'Who goes zere ze second time?' ant I was silent.

  'Who goes zere ze third time?' ant I ron away, I sprang in ze vater,

  climp op to ze oser site, ant walk on.

  "Ze entire night I ron on ze vay, pot ven taylight came I was afrait

  zat zey woult catch me, ant I hit myself in ze high corn. Zere I kneelet

  town, zanket ze Vater in Heaven for my safety, ant fall asleep wis a

  tranquil feeling.

  "I wakenet op in ze evening, ant gang furser. At once one large German

  carriage, wis two raven-black horse, came alongside me. In ze carriage

  sit one well-tresset man, smoking pipe, ant look at me. I go slowly,

  so zat ze carriage shall have time to pass me, pot I go slowly, ant ze

  carriage go slowly, ant ze man look at me. I go quick, ant ze carriage

  go quick, ant ze man stop its two horses, ant look at me. 'Young man,'

  says he, 'where go you so late?' I says, 'I go to Frankfort.' 'Sit in ze

  carriage--zere is room enough, ant I will trag you,' he says. 'Bot

  why have you nosing about you? Your boots is dirty, ant your beart not

  shaven.' I seated wis him, ant says, 'Ich bin one poor man, ant I would

  like to pusy myself wis somesing in a manufactory. My tressing is dirty

  because I fell in ze mud on ze roat.'

  "'You tell me ontruse, young man,' says he. 'Ze roat is kvite dry now.'

  I was silent. 'Tell me ze whole truse,' goes on ze goot man--'who you

  are, ant vere you go to? I like your face, ant ven you is one honest

  man, so I will help you.' Ant I tell all.

  "'Goot, young man!' he says. 'Come to my manufactory of rope, ant I will

  give you work ant tress ant money, ant you can live wis os.' I says,

  'Goot!'

  "I go to ze manufactory of rope, ant ze goot man says to his voman,

  'Here is one yong man who defented his Vaterland, ant ron away from

  prisons. He has not house nor tresses nor preat. He will live wis os.

  Give him clean linen, ant norish him.'

  "I livet one ant a half year in ze manufactory of rope, ant my lantlort

  loaft me so much zat he would not let me loose. Ant I felt very goot.

  "I were zen handsome man--yong, of pig stature, with blue eyes and

  romische nose--ant Missis L-- (I like not to say her name--she was ze

  voman of my lantlort) was yong ant handsome laty. Ant she fell in loaf

  wis me."

  Here Karl Ivanitch made a long pause, lowered his kindly blue eyes,

  shook his head quietly, and smiled as people always do under the

  influence of a pleasing recollection.

  "Yes," he resumed as he leant back in his arm-chair and adjusted his

  dressing-gown, "I have experiencet many sings in my life, pot zere is

  my witness,"--here he pointed to an image of the Saviour, embroidered

  on wool, which was hanging over his bed--"zat nopoty in ze worlt can say

  zat Karl Ivanitch has been one dishonest man, I would not repay black

  ingratitude for ze goot which Mister L-- dit me, ant I resoluted to ron

  away. So in ze evening, ven all were asleep, I writet one letter to my

  lantlort, ant laid it on ze table in his room. Zen I taket my tresses,

  tree Thaler of money, ant go mysteriously into ze street. Nopoty have

  seen me, ant I go on ze roat."

  X. CONCLUSION OF KARL'S NARRATIVE

  "I had not seen my Mamma for nine year, ant I know not whether she lived

  or whether her bones had long since lain in ze dark grave. Ven I come to

  my own country and go to ze town I ask, 'Where live Kustaf Mayer who was

  farm
er to ze Count von Zomerblat?' ant zey answer me, 'Graf Zomerblat

  is deat, ant Kustaf Mayer live now in ze pig street, ant keep a

  public-house.' So I tress in my new waistcoat and one noble coat which

  ze manufacturist presented me, arranged my hairs nice, ant go to ze

  public-house of my Papa. Sister Mariechen vas sitting on a pench, and

  she ask me what I want. I says, 'Might I trink one glass of pranty?'

  ant she says, 'Vater, here is a yong man who wish to trink one glass of

  pranty.' Ant Papa says, 'Give him ze glass.' I set to ze table, trink my

  glass of pranty, smoke my pipe, ant look at Papa, Mariechen, ant Johann

  (who also come into ze shop). In ze conversation Papa says, 'You know,

  perhaps, yong man, where stants our army?' and I say, 'I myself am come

  from ze army, ant it stants now at Wien.' 'Our son,' says Papa, 'is a

  Soldat, ant now is it nine years since he wrote never one wort, and we

  know not whether he is alive or dead. My voman cry continually for him.'

  I still fumigate the pipe, ant say, 'What was your son's name, and where

  servet he? Perhaps I may know him.' 'His name was Karl Mayer, ant he

  servet in ze Austrian Jagers.' 'He were of pig stature, ant a handsome

  man like yourself,' puts in Mariechen. I say, 'I know your Karl.'

  'Amalia,' exclaimet my Vater. 'Come here! Here is yong man which knows

  our Karl!'--ant my dear Mutter comes out from a back door. I knew her

  directly. 'You know our Karl?' says she, ant looks at me, ant, white all

  over, trembles. 'Yes, I haf seen him,' I says, without ze corage to look

  at her, for my heart did almost burst. 'My Karl is alive?' she cry. 'Zen

  tank Got! Vere is he, my Karl? I woult die in peace if I coult see him

  once more--my darling son! Bot Got will not haf it so.' Then she cried,

  and I coult no longer stant it. 'Darling Mamma!' I say, 'I am your son,

  I am your Karl!'--and she fell into my arms."

  Karl Ivanitch covered his eyes, and his lips were quivering.

  "'Mutter,' sagte ich, 'ich bin ihr Sohn, ich bin ihr Karl!'--und sie

  sturtzte mir in die Arme!'" he repeated, recovering a little and wiping

  the tears from his eyes.

  "Bot Got did not wish me to finish my tays in my own town. I were

  pursuet by fate. I livet in my own town only sree mons. One Suntay I sit

  in a coffee-house, ant trinket one pint of Pier, ant fumigated my

  pipe, ant speaket wis some frients of Politik, of ze Emperor Franz, of

  Napoleon, of ze war--ant anypoty might say his opinion. But next to us

  sits a strange chentleman in a grey Uberrock, who trink coffee, fumigate

  the pipe, ant says nosing. Ven the night watchman shoutet ten o'clock I

  taket my hat, paid ze money, and go home. At ze middle of ze night

  some one knock at ze door. I rise ant says, 'Who is zere?' 'Open!' says

  someone. I shout again, 'First say who is zere, ant I will open.' 'Open

  in the name of the law!' say the someone behint the door. I now do so.

  Two Soldaten wis gons stant at ze door, ant into ze room steps ze man in

  ze grey Uberrock, who had sat with us in ze coffeehouse. He were Spion!

  'Come wis me,' says ze Spion, 'Very goot!' say I. I dresset myself in

  boots, trousers, ant coat, ant go srough ze room. Ven I come to ze wall

  where my gon hangs I take it, ant says, 'You are a Spion, so defent

  you!' I give one stroke left, one right, ant one on ze head. Ze Spion

  lay precipitated on ze floor! Zen I taket my cloak-bag ant money, ant

  jompet out of ze vintow. I vent to Ems, where I was acquainted wis one

  General Sasin, who loaft me, givet me a passport from ze Embassy, ant

  taket me to Russland to learn his chiltren. Ven General Sasin tiet, your

  Mamma callet for me, ant says, 'Karl Ivanitch, I gif you my children.

  Loaf them, ant I will never leave you, ant will take care for your olt

  age.' Now is she teat, ant all is forgotten! For my twenty year full of

  service I most now go into ze street ant seek for a try crust of preat

  for my olt age! Got sees all sis, ant knows all sis. His holy will be

  done! Only-only, I yearn for you, my children!"--and Karl drew me to

  him, and kissed me on the forehead.

  XI. ONE MARK ONLY

  The year of mourning over, Grandmamma recovered a little from her grief,

  and once more took to receiving occasional guests, especially children

  of the same age as ourselves.

  On the 13th of December--Lubotshka's birthday--the Princess Kornakoff

  and her daughters, with Madame Valakhin, Sonetchka, Ilinka Grap, and the

  two younger Iwins, arrived at our house before luncheon.

  Though we could hear the sounds of talking, laughter, and movements

  going on in the drawing-room, we could not join the party until our

  morning lessons were finished. The table of studies in the schoolroom

  said, "Lundi, de 2 a 3, maitre d'Histoire et de Geographie," and this

  infernal maitre d'Histoire we must await, listen to, and see the back

  of before we could gain our liberty. Already it was twenty minutes past

  two, and nothing was to be heard of the tutor, nor yet anything to be

  seen of him in the street, although I kept looking up and down it with

  the greatest impatience and with an emphatic longing never to see the

  maitre again.

  "I believe he is not coming to-day," said Woloda, looking up for a

  moment from his lesson-book.

  "I hope he is not, please the Lord!" I answered, but in a despondent

  tone. "Yet there he DOES come, I believe, all the same!"

  "Not he! Why, that is a GENTLEMAN," said Woloda, likewise looking out of

  the window, "Let us wait till half-past two, and then ask St. Jerome if

  we may put away our books."

  "Yes, and wish them au revoir," I added, stretching my arms, with the

  book clasped in my hands, over my head. Having hitherto idled away my

  time, I now opened the book at the place where the lesson was to begin,

  and started to learn it. It was long and difficult, and, moreover, I

  was in the mood when one's thoughts refuse to be arrested by anything at

  all. Consequently I made no progress. After our last lesson in history

  (which always seemed to me a peculiarly arduous and wearisome subject)

  the history master had complained to St. Jerome of me because only two

  good marks stood to my credit in the register--a very small total. St.

  Jerome had then told me that if I failed to gain less than THREE marks

  at the next lesson I should be severely punished. The next lesson was

  now imminent, and I confess that I felt a little nervous.

  So absorbed, however, did I become in my reading that the sound of

  goloshes being taken off in the ante-room came upon me almost as a

  shock. I had just time to look up when there appeared in the doorway the

  servile and (to me) very disgusting face and form of the master, clad in

  a blue frockcoat with brass buttons.

  Slowly he set down his hat and books and adjusted the folds of his coat

  (as though such a thing were necessary!), and seated himself in his

  place.

  "Well, gentlemen," he said, rubbing his hands, "let us first of all

  repeat the general contents of the last lesson: after which I will

  proceed to narrate the succeeding events of the middle ages."

  This me
ant "Say over the last lesson." While Woloda was answering the

  master with the entire ease and confidence which come of knowing a

  subject well, I went aimlessly out on to the landing, and, since I

  was not allowed to go downstairs, what more natural than that I should

  involuntarily turn towards the alcove on the landing? Yet before I had

  time to establish myself in my usual coign of vantage behind the door I

  found myself pounced upon by Mimi--always the cause of my misfortunes!

  "YOU here?" she said, looking severely, first at myself, and then at the

  maidservants' door, and then at myself again.

  I felt thoroughly guilty, firstly, because I was not in the schoolroom,

  and secondly, because I was in a forbidden place. So I remained silent,

  and, dropping my head, assumed a touching expression of contrition.

  "Indeed, this is TOO bad!" Mimi went on, "What are you doing here?"

  Still I said nothing.

  "Well, it shall not rest where it is," she added, tapping the banister

  with her yellow fingers. "I shall inform the Countess."

  It was five minutes to three when I re-entered the schoolroom. The

  master, as though oblivious of my presence or absence, was explaining

  the new lesson to Woloda. When he had finished doing this, and had put

  his books together (while Woloda went into the other room to fetch his

  ticket), the comforting idea occurred to me that perhaps the whole thing

  was over now, and that the master had forgotten me.

  But suddenly he turned in my direction with a malicious smile, and said

  as he rubbed his hands anew, "I hope you have learnt your lesson?"

  "Yes," I replied.

  "Would you be so kind, then, as to tell me something about St. Louis'