Read The Queen of Spades and Selected Works (Pushkin Collection) Page 22


  VAIN GIFT, GIFT OF CHANCE

  К ***

  The Verse Novel

  Imperial Lyceum in Tsarskoe Selo — where Pushkin studied and developed his poetry

  EUGENE ONEGIN

  Translated by Henry Spalding

  Regarded by many as Pushkin’s masterpiece, Eugene Onegin is a novel in verse, published in serial form between 1825 and 1832. It consists of 389 stanzas of iambic tetrameter with an unusual rhyme scheme, using a blend of feminine and masculine rhymes, which has since become known as the ‘Onegin stanza’ or the ‘Pushkin sonnet’. This innovative rhyme scheme, as well as the natural tone and diction have helped to establish Pushkin as the acknowledged master of Russian poetry. Eugene Onegin is also admired for its deft handling of verse narrative and its exploration of important themes, such as death, the nature of love, ennui and the defying of conventions.

  Set in the 1820s, the story is told by an educated and sensitive narrator, similar to Pushkin himself. The character Eugene Onegin is portrayed as being a bored Saint Petersburg socialite, whose life consists of balls, concerts, parties and little more. When he inherits a landed estate from his uncle, he moves to the country, where he strikes up a friendship with his neighbour, the young poet Vladimir Lensky. One day, Lensky takes Onegin to dine with the family of his fiancée, the sociable but superficial Olga Larina. At this meeting he also catches a glimpse of Olga’s sister Tatyana, one of Pushkin’s most unique and famous characters…

  The first edition’s title page

  CONTENTS

  PREFACE

  CANTO THE FIRST

  CANTO THE SECOND

  CANTO THE THIRD

  CANTO THE FOURTH

  CANTO THE FIFTH

  CANTO THE SIXTH

  CANTO THE SEVENTH

  CANTO THE EIGHTH

  Pushkin’s own illustration of the character Eugene Onegin, 1830

  A late nineteenth century illustration

  ‘Onegin’ by Elena Samokish-Sudkovskaya, 1908

  PREFACE

  Eugene Oneguine, the chief poetical work of Russia’s greatest poet, having been translated into all the principal languages of Europe except our own, I hope that this version may prove an acceptable contribution to literature. Tastes are various in matters of poetry, but the present work possesses a more solid claim to attention in the series of faithful pictures it offers of Russian life and manners. If these be compared with Mr. Wallace’s book on Russia, it will be seen that social life in that empire still preserves many of the characteristics which distinguished it half a century ago — the period of the first publication of the latter cantos of this poem.

  Many references will be found in it to our own country and its literature. Russian poets have carefully plagiarized the English — notably Joukovski. Pushkin, however, was no plagiarist, though undoubtedly his mind was greatly influenced by the genius of Byron — more especially in the earliest part of his career. Indeed, as will be remarked in the following pages, he scarcely makes an effort to disguise this fact.

  The biographical sketch is of course a mere outline. I did not think a longer one advisable, as memoirs do not usually excite much interest till the subjects of them are pretty well known. In the “notes” I have endeavored to elucidate a somewhat obscure subject. Some of the poet’s allusions remain enigmatical to the present day. The point of each sarcasm naturally passed out of mind together with the society against which it was levelled. If some of the versification is rough and wanting in “go,” I must plead in excuse the difficult form of the stanza, and in many instances the inelastic nature of the subject matter to be versified. Stanza XXXV Canto II forms a good example of the latter difficulty, and is omitted in the German and French versions to which I have had access. The translation of foreign verse is comparatively easy so long as it is confined to conventional poetic subjects, but when it embraces abrupt scraps of conversation and the description of local customs it becomes a much more arduous affair. I think I may say that I have adhered closely to the text of the original.

  The following foreign translations of this poem have appeared:

  1. French prose. Oeuvres choisis de Pouchekine. H. Dupont. Paris, 1847.

  2. German verse. A. Puschkin’s poetische Werke. F. Bodenstedt. Berlin, 1854.

  3. Polish verse. Eugeniusz Oniegin. Roman Aleksandra Puszkina. A. Sikorski. Vilnius, 1847.

  4. Italian prose. Racconti poetici di A. Puschkin, tradotti da A. Delatre. Firenze, 1856.

  London, May 1881.

  MON PORTRAIT

  Written by the poet at the age of 15.

  Vous me demandez mon portrait,

  Mais peint d’apres nature:

  Mon cher, il sera bientot fait,

  Quoique en miniature.

  Je suis un jeune polisson

  Encore dans les classes;

  Point sot, je le dis sans facon,

  Et sans fades grimaces.

  Oui! il ne fut babillard

  Ni docteur de Sorbonne,

  Plus ennuyeux et plus braillard

  Que moi-meme en personne.

  Ma taille, a celle des plus longs,

  Elle n’est point egalee;

  J’ai le teint frais, les cheveux blonds,

  Et la tete bouclee.

  J’aime et le monde et son fracas,

  Je hais la solitude;

  J’abhorre et noises et debats,

  Et tant soit peu l’etude.

  Spectacles, bals, me plaisent fort,

  Et d’apres ma pensee,

  Je dirais ce que j’aime encore,

  Si je n’etais au Lycee.

  Apres cela, mon cher ami,

  L’on peut me reconnaitre,

  Oui! tel que le bon Dieu me fit,

  Je veux toujours paraitre.

  Vrai demon, par l’espieglerie,

  Vrai singe par sa mine,

  Beaucoup et trop d’etourderie,

  Ma foi! voila Pouchekine.

  Note: Russian proper names to be pronounced as in French (the nasal sound of m and n excepted) in the following translation. The accent, which is very arbitrary in the Russian language, is indicated unmistakably in a rhythmical composition.

  EUGENE ONEGUINE

  Petri de vanite, il avait encore plus de cette espece d’orgueil, qui fait avouer avec la meme indifference les bonnes comme les mauvaises actions, suite d’un sentiment de superiorite, peut-etre imaginaire. — Tire d’une lettre particuliere.

  CANTO THE FIRST

  ‘The Spleen’

  ‘He rushes at life and exhausts the passions.’

  Prince Viazemski

  Canto the First

  I

  “My uncle’s goodness is extreme,

  If seriously he hath disease;

  He hath acquired the world’s esteem

  And nothing more important sees;

  A paragon of virtue he!

  But what a nuisance it will be,

  Chained to his bedside night and day

  Without a chance to slip away.

  Ye need dissimulation base

  A dying man with art to soothe,

  Beneath his head the pillow smooth,

  And physic bring with mournful face,

  To sigh and meditate alone:

  When will the devil take his own!”

  II

  Thus mused a madcap young, who drove

  Through clouds of dust at postal pace,

  By the decree of Mighty Jove,

  Inheritor of all his race.

  Friends of Liudmila and Ruslan,(1)

  Let me present ye to the man,

  Who without more prevarication

  The hero is of my narration!

  Oneguine, O my gentle readers,

  Was born beside the Neva, where

  It may be ye were born, or there

  Have shone as one of fashion’s leaders.

  I also wandered there of old,

  But cannot stand the northern cold.(2)

  [Note 1: Ruslan
and Liudmila, the title of Pushkin’s first important work, written 1817-20. It is a tale relating the adventures of the knight-errant Ruslan in search of his fair lady Liudmila, who has been carried off by a kaldoon, or magician.]

  [Note 2: Written in Bessarabia.]

  III

  Having performed his service truly,

  Deep into debt his father ran;

  Three balls a year he gave ye duly,

  At last became a ruined man.

  But Eugene was by fate preserved,

  For first “madame” his wants observed,

  And then “monsieur” supplied her place;(3)

  The boy was wild but full of grace.

  “Monsieur l’Abbe,” a starving Gaul,

  Fearing his pupil to annoy,

  Instructed jestingly the boy,

  Morality taught scarce at all;

  Gently for pranks he would reprove

  And in the Summer Garden rove.

  [Note 3: In Russia foreign tutors and governesses are commonly styled “monsieur” or “madame.”]

  IV

  When youth’s rebellious hour drew near

  And my Eugene the path must trace —

  The path of hope and tender fear —

  Monsieur clean out of doors they chase.

  Lo! my Oneguine free as air,

  Cropped in the latest style his hair,

  Dressed like a London dandy he

  The giddy world at last shall see.

  He wrote and spoke, so all allowed,

  In the French language perfectly,

  Danced the mazurka gracefully,

  Without the least constraint he bowed.

  What more’s required? The world replies,

  He is a charming youth and wise.

  V

  We all of us of education

  A something somehow have obtained,

  Thus, praised be God! a reputation

  With us is easily attained.

  Oneguine was — so many deemed

  [Unerring critics self-esteemed],

  Pedantic although scholar like,

  In truth he had the happy trick

  Without constraint in conversation

  Of touching lightly every theme.

  Silent, oracular ye’d see him

  Amid a serious disputation,

  Then suddenly discharge a joke

  The ladies’ laughter to provoke.

  VI

  Latin is just now not in vogue,

  But if the truth I must relate,

  Oneguine knew enough, the rogue

  A mild quotation to translate,

  A little Juvenal to spout,

  With “vale” finish off a note;

  Two verses he could recollect

  Of the Aeneid, but incorrect.

  In history he took no pleasure,

  The dusty chronicles of earth

  For him were but of little worth,

  Yet still of anecdotes a treasure

  Within his memory there lay,

  From Romulus unto our day.

  VII

  For empty sound the rascal swore he

  Existence would not make a curse,

  Knew not an iamb from a choree,

  Although we read him heaps of verse.

  Homer, Theocritus, he jeered,

  But Adam Smith to read appeared,

  And at economy was great;

  That is, he could elucidate

  How empires store of wealth unfold,

  How flourish, why and wherefore less

  If the raw product they possess

  The medium is required of gold.

  The father scarcely understands

  His son and mortgages his lands.

  VIII

  But upon all that Eugene knew

  I have no leisure here to dwell,

  But say he was a genius who

  In one thing really did excel.

  It occupied him from a boy,

  A labour, torment, yet a joy,

  It whiled his idle hours away

  And wholly occupied his day —

  The amatory science warm,

  Which Ovid once immortalized,

  For which the poet agonized

  Laid down his life of sun and storm

  On the steppes of Moldavia lone,

  Far from his Italy — his own.(4)

  [Note 4: Referring to Tomi, the reputed place of exile of Ovid. Pushkin, then residing in Bessarabia, was in the same predicament as his predecessor in song, though he certainly did not plead guilty to the fact, since he remarks in his ode to Ovid: To exile self-consigned, With self, society, existence, discontent, I visit in these days, with melancholy mind, The country whereunto a mournful age thee sent. Ovid thus enumerates the causes which brought about his banishment: ”Perdiderint quum me duo crimina, carmen et error, Alterius facti culpa silenda mihi est.” Ovidii Nasonis Tristium, lib. ii. 207.]

  IX

  How soon he learnt deception’s art,

  Hope to conceal and jealousy,

  False confidence or doubt to impart,

  Sombre or glad in turn to be,

  Haughty appear, subservient,

  Obsequious or indifferent!

  What languor would his silence show,

  How full of fire his speech would glow!

  How artless was the note which spoke

  Of love again, and yet again;

  How deftly could he transport feign!

  How bright and tender was his look,

  Modest yet daring! And a tear

  Would at the proper time appear.

  X

  How well he played the greenhorn’s part

  To cheat the inexperienced fair,

  Sometimes by pleasing flattery’s art,

  Sometimes by ready-made despair;

  The feeble moment would espy

  Of tender years the modesty

  Conquer by passion and address,

  Await the long-delayed caress.

  Avowal then ‘twas time to pray,

  Attentive to the heart’s first beating,

  Follow up love — a secret meeting

  Arrange without the least delay —

  Then, then — well, in some solitude

  Lessons to give he understood!

  XI

  How soon he learnt to titillate

  The heart of the inveterate flirt!

  Desirous to annihilate

  His own antagonists expert,

  How bitterly he would malign,

  With many a snare their pathway line!

  But ye, O happy husbands, ye

  With him were friends eternally:

  The crafty spouse caressed him, who

  By Faublas in his youth was schooled,(5)

  And the suspicious veteran old,

  The pompous, swaggering cuckold too,

  Who floats contentedly through life,

  Proud of his dinners and his wife!

  [Note 5: Les Aventures du Chevalier de Faublas, a romance of a loose character by Jean Baptiste Louvet de Couvray, b. 1760, d. 1797, famous for his bold oration denouncing Robespierre, Marat and Danton.]

  XII

  One morn whilst yet in bed he lay,

  His valet brings him letters three.

  What, invitations? The same day

  As many entertainments be!

  A ball here, there a children’s treat,

  Whither shall my rapscallion flit?

  Whither shall he go first? He’ll see,

  Perchance he will to all the three.

  Meantime in matutinal dress

  And hat surnamed a “Bolivar”(6)

  He hies unto the “Boulevard,”

  To loiter there in idleness

  Until the sleepless Breguet chime(7)

  Announcing to him dinner-time.

  [Note 6: A la “Bolivar,” from the founder of Bolivian independence.]

  [Note 7: M. Breguet, a celebrated Parisian watchmaker — hence a slang term for
a watch.]

  XIII

  ‘Tis dark. He seats him in a sleigh,

  “Drive on!” the cheerful cry goes forth,

  His furs are powdered on the way

  By the fine silver of the north.

  He bends his course to Talon’s, where(8)

  He knows Kaverine will repair.(9)

  He enters. High the cork arose

  And Comet champagne foaming flows.

  Before him red roast beef is seen

  And truffles, dear to youthful eyes,

  Flanked by immortal Strasbourg pies,

  The choicest flowers of French cuisine,

  And Limburg cheese alive and old

  Is seen next pine-apples of gold.

  [Note 8: Talon, a famous Saint Petersburg restaurateur.]

  [Note 9: Paul Petrovitch Kaverine, a friend for whom Pushkin in his youth appears to have entertained great respect and admiration. He was an officer in the Hussars of the Guard, and a noted “dandy” and man about town. The poet on one occasion addressed the following impromptu to his friend’s portrait: ”Within him daily see the the fires of punch and war, Upon the fields of Mars a gallant warrior, A faithful friend to friends, of ladies torturer, But ever the Hussar.”]

  XIV

  Still thirst fresh draughts of wine compels

  To cool the cutlets’ seething grease,

  When the sonorous Breguet tells

  Of the commencement of the piece.

  A critic of the stage malicious,

  A slave of actresses capricious,

  Oneguine was a citizen

  Of the domains of the side-scene.

  To the theatre he repairs

  Where each young critic ready stands,

  Capers applauds with clap of hands,

  With hisses Cleopatra scares,

  Moina recalls for this alone

  That all may hear his voice’s tone.

  XV

  Thou fairy-land! Where formerly

  Shone pungent Satire’s dauntless king,

  Von Wisine, friend of liberty,

  And Kniajnine, apt at copying.

  The young Simeonova too there

  With Ozeroff was wont to share

  Applause, the people’s donative.

  There our Katenine did revive

  Corneille’s majestic genius,

  Sarcastic Shakhovskoi brought out

  His comedies, a noisy rout,

  There Didelot became glorious,

  There, there, beneath the side-scene’s shade