Authors: Boleslaw Prus
âI swear that of all the women I know, you are the only one worth anything! But enough of this. Ever since I found out that Wokulski loves Bela (and how he does!), my cousin has been making a strange impression on me. Earlier, I used to regard her as exceptionalâtoday, she strikes me as ordinary; earlier, as exaltedâtoday, shallowâ¦But this is only at moments, and I see I may be wrong.'
Mrs WÄ
sowska smiled. âIt's said,' she remarked, âthat whenever a man looks at a woman, Satan puts rose-coloured spectacles on him.'
âSometimes he takes them off.'
âNot without suffering for it,' Mrs WÄ
sowska replied. âBut do you know, sir,' she added, âsince we are almost cousins, let us be less formal with each otherâ¦'
âThank you, I think not.'
âBut why?'
âI have no intention of becoming your admirer, madam.'
âI am offering you friendship.'
âPrecisely. It is a bridge over whichâ¦'
At this moment Izabela suddenly rose from her seat and came to them: she was indignant.
âAre you abandoning the maestro?' Mrs WÄ
sowska asked her.
âHe is impertinent!' said Izabela, in a tone which contained anger.
âI'm very glad, cousin, that you've found out that clown so quickly,' said Ochocki. âWon't you sit down?'
But Izabela gave him a thunderous look, began talking to Malborg, who had just come up, then went out of the room. On the threshold she glanced over her fan at Molinari, who was talking very gaily to Miss Rzezuchowska.
âIt seems to me, Mr Ochocki,' said Mrs WÄ
sowska, âthat you will have to become another Copernicus before you learn caution. How could you call that man a clown in Izabela's presence?'
âBut she called him impertinent!'
âNevertheless she is interested in him.'
âWell, please don't joke with me. If she isn't interested in a man who adores herâ¦'
âThen she will interest herself all the more in a man who despises her.'
âA taste for strong condiments is a sign of weak health,' Ochocki commented.
âWhich of us women here is healthy!' said Mrs WÄ
sowska, embracing the company with a contemptuous glance. âGive me your hand, and let's go into the drawing-room.'
In the hall they met the Prince, who greeted Mrs WÄ
sowska with great satisfaction.
âWell, Your Highness, and Molinari?' she asked.
âBeautiful toneâ¦veryâ¦'
âAnd shall we receive him at home?'
âOh yesâin the vestibule.'
Within a few minutes the Prince's witticism had gone all around the rooms. Mrs Rzezuchowska had to leave her guests because of a sudden migraine.
When Mrs WÄ
sowska, talking with friends on the way, went into the drawing-room with Ochocki, she saw Izabela already sitting there with Molinari. âWhich of us was right?' she asked, nudging Ochocki with her fan: âPoor Wokulski!'
âI assure you he is less so than Izabela.'
âWhy?'
âBecause if women only love men who despise them, my cousin will soon have to be crazy about Wokulski.'
âWill you tell her that?' asked Mrs WÄ
sowska indignantly.
âNever! After all, I am his friend, and that alone places me under an obligation not to warn him. But I'm a man too, and God knows I feel it, when this sort of conflict arises between a man and a woman.'
âThe man will lose it.'
âNo, madam. The woman will lose, and completely. After all, that is why women everywhere are slavesâthey attach themselves to those who despise them.'
âDon't commit sacrilege.'
As Molinari had started talking to Mrs Wywrotnicka, Mrs WÄ
sowska approached Izabela, took her arm and they began promenading about the drawing-room. âSo you've become reconciled to the impertinent?' Mrs WÄ
sowska inquired.
âHe apologised,' Izabela replied.
âSo quickly? And did he mend his ways?'
âIt is my business to see that he need not.'
âWokulski was here,' said Mrs WÄ
sowska, âand left rather suddenly.'
âLong ago?'
âWhen you were sitting down to supper: he was standing right by the door.'
Izabela frowned. âMy dear Kazia,' she said, âI know what you mean. Let me tell you once and for all, that I have no intention of renouncing my likings and pleasures for Wokulski's sake. Marriage isn't a prison, and I am less suited than anyone to being a prisoner.'
âYou are right. Though is it proper to hurt such feelings for a whim?'
Izabela grew embarrassed: âWhat am I supposed to do?'
âThat depends on you. You are not engaged to him, yet.'
âQuite so. I understand now,' and Izabela smiled.
Mr Malborg and Mr NiwiÅski were standing by a window and watching both ladies through their eye-glasses. âBeautiful creatures,' sighed Mr Malborg.
âEach in a different style,' Mr NiwiÅski added.
âWhich do you prefer?'
âBoth.'
âIâIzabela, thenâWÄ
sowska.'
âHow delightfully they embrace!â¦How they smile! It is all meant to tease us. Mischievous creatures?!'
âUnderneath they may hate one another.'
âWell, not just now at least,' Mr NiwiÅski concluded.
Ochocki approached the ladies as they strolled. âAre you in the conspiracy against me too, cousin?' Izabela inquired.
âA conspiracy? Never. I can be at only open war with a woman.'
âAt open war with a woman! Whatever does this mean? Wars are carried out with a view to concluding an advantageous peace.'
âThat isn't my system.'
âReally?' said Izabela with a smile. âSo let us make a wager that you will lay down your arms, for I consider the war has started.'
âYou will lose it, cousin, even over the points on which you expect the greatest victory,' Ochocki replied solemnly.
Izabela turned sulky.
âBela,' the Countess whispered to her, coming up at this moment, âwe are leaving.'
âAnd has Molinari promised?' Izabela asked in the same tone.
âI haven't mentioned it,' the Countess replied haughtily.
âWhy not, aunt?'
âHe has made a bad impression.'
If Izabela had been informed that Wokulski had died on Molinari's account, the great violinist would have lost nothing in her eyes. But to hear that he had made a bad impression affected her disagreeably. She bade goodbye to the musician coolly, almost haughtily.
Although their acquaintance had lasted only a few hours, Molinari greatly interested Izabela. When, on returning home late that night, she gazed at her Apollo, the marble god seemed to her to have something of the violinist's attitude and features. She blushed to recollect how very often the statue changed its features; for a short while it had even resembled Wokulski. However, she grew calmer at the thought that today's change was the last, that her predilections hitherto had been based on errors and that if Apollo symbolised anyone, that person could only be Molinari.
She could not fall asleep, the most contradictory feelings were at war in her heart: anger, fear, curiosity and a sort of tenderness. Sometimes even amazement arose, when she recalled the violinist's boldness. His first words had been that she was the most beautiful woman he knew: going in to supper, he had clasped her arm passionately, and declared he loved her. And at supper, despite the presence of Szatalski and Miss Rzezuchowska, he had sought her hand under the table so insistently thatâ¦what could she do?
She had never before encountered such violent feelings. Surely he must have fallen in love with her at first sight, madly, eternally. Had he not whispered to her in the end (which obliged her to leave the table) that he would not hesitate to give his life for a few days spent with her. âWhat did he not risk by saying such a thing?' Izabela thought. It did not occur to her that at most he had risked her quitting his society before supper was over.
âWhat feelingsâ¦what passionâ¦' she repeated inwardly.
For two days, Izabela did not go out, nor did she see callers. On the third day, Apollo, though still resembling Molinari, sometimes recalled Starski. That afternoon she received Messrs Rydzewski and Pieczarkowski, who declared that Molinari was already leaving Warsaw, that he had offended society, that his album of press-cuttings was a fraud, because unfavourable notices had been left out of it. Finally they added that only in Warsaw would such a second-rate violinist and common individual receive such an ovation.
Izabela was indignant, and reminded Mr Pieczarkowski that he and none other had praised the musician. Mr Pieczarkowski, in surprise, appealed to Mr Rydzewski, who was present and to Szatalski (who wasn't) to bear witness that he had mistrusted Molinari from the start.
For the next two days, Izabela regarded the great musician as the victim of jealousy. She kept telling herself that he alone deserved her sympathy and that she would never forget him. Meanwhile, Szatalski sent her a bouquet of violets, and Izabela noticed, not without some misgivings, that Apollo was beginning to look like Szatalski, and that Molinari was rapidly being erased from her memory.
Almost a week after the concert, when she was sitting in her boudoir in the dark, a long-forgotten vision appeared before her eyes. She seemed to be travelling in a carriage with her father down from a mountain into a valley full of clouds of smoke and steam. A huge hand emerged from the clouds, holding a card, at which Tomasz gazed with agitated curiosity. âWith whom is Papa playing?' she thought. At this moment, the wind blew and from the clouds appeared Wokulski's face, also huge.
âI had this same vision a year ago,' said Izabela to herself. âWhat can it mean?'
Only now did she realise that Wokulski hadn't been to see them for a week.
After the Rzezuchowskis' party, Wokulski had gone home in an unusual state of mind. The attack of frenzy passed, and yielded to apathetic tranquillity. Wokulski did not sleep all night, but this did not strike him as disagreeable. He lay still, without thinking of anything, merely listening curiously for the hours. Oneâ¦Twoâ¦Threeâ¦
Next day he rose late, and kept listening to the clock as he drank tea, until afternoon. Elevenâ¦Twelveâ¦Oneâ¦How boring! He wanted something to read, but did not feel like going to the library for a book; so he lay down on the
chaise-longue
, and began thinking about Darwin's theory: what is natural selection? The result of a struggle for existence, in which beings that don't possess certain attributes perish, and talented ones survive. What is the most important attribute? Sexual attraction? No, the horror of death. If horror of death didn't put a brake on man, this wisest of animals would not drag the chain of life. There are traces in ancient Indian poetry that once a human race existed, with less horror of death than we have. And that race perished, and its descendants are either slaves or ascetics.
What is horror of death? A natural instinct based on illusion. There are people with a horror of mice, which are very innocent creatures, and even of strawberries, which are very delicious (when did I last eat strawberries?â¦Yes, at ZasÅawek, last Septemberâ¦What a charming place ZasÅawek is; I wonder if the Duchess is still alive, and whether she has a horror of death?).
For what, after all, is the horror of death? An illusion! To die means not to be anywhere, not to feel anything, and not to think of anything. How very many places I am
not
in, today; not in America, Paris, the moon, I'm not even in my store, and nothing troubles me. And how many things have I
not
thought of, and am not thinking of? I am thinking of one thing only, not millions of other things, I don't know of them, even, and nothing concerns me.
So what can be disagreeable in the fact that
not
being in millions of places, but in one particular place, and
not
thinking millions of things, only one particular thingâthat I should stop being in this one place and thinking of one thing? Really, the fear of death is the most absurd illusion humanity has been subjected to for many centuries. Savages fear thunder, the noise of firearms, even mirrors: and we, allegedly civilised, fear deathâ¦
He rose, looked out of the window and smiled to see people hurrying somewhere, bowing to one another, assisting ladies. He watched their violent gestures, great interests, the unconscious gallantry of the men, the mechanical coquetry of the women, the indifferent expressions of the cab-drivers, the misery of their horses, and he could not resist the comment that all this life, full of agitation and torment, is but a capital folly.
He sat thus all day. Next day, Rzecki came and reminded him it was April 1st, and ÅÄcki must be paid two thousand five hundred roubles interest. âThat's so,' Wokulski replied, âtake it to him.'
âI thought you would go yourself.'
âI don't feel like it.'
Rzecki fidgeted around the room, snorted, finally said: âMrs Stawska is down in the dumps, somehow. Perhaps you'll pay her a visit?'
âTrue, I haven't been to see her for a long time. I'll go this evening.'
On gaining this response, Rzecki couldn't contain himself. He said goodbye very affectionately to Wokulski, rushed to the store for some money, then got into a droshky and told the driver to go to Mrs Misiewicz's address.
âI have dropped by for only a moment,' he exclaimed joyfully, âas I have important business to transact. I may tell you, madam, that StaÅ will be here later today. I think (though this is in the utmost secrecy) that Wokulski has finally broken with the ÅÄckis.'
âCan it be?' cried Mrs Misiewicz, clasping her hands.
âI am almost certain, butâ¦Good-day to youâ¦StaÅ will be here this evening.'
In fact, Wokulski came that evening and, which is more important, began calling every evening. He came rather late, when little Helena was already in bed, and Mrs Misiewicz had gone to her room, and he would spend a few hours with Mrs Stawska. As a rule, he was silent and listened to her accounts of Mrs Miller's shop, or incidents in the streets. He rarely spoke, and when he did, it was in aphorisms which didn't have much relevance to what was said to him. Once, for no reason, he remarked: âA man is like a moth: he hurls himself blindly into the flame, although it hurts and will consume him. He does this,' he added, after reflecting, âuntil he recovers his senses. And this is how he differs from a moth.'