Authors: Boleslaw Prus
âWhat wages do you expect?'
âA thousandâ¦two thousand roubles,' the young man replied, embarrassed.
Wokulski shook his head involuntarily: âI doubt whether we shall have any posts suited to your requirements. However, please call on me one dayâ¦'
The round-shouldered Count began speaking from the middle of the room: âAnd so, gentlemen, we are agreed in principle to enter into the partnership proposed by Mr Wokulski. I therefore take pleasure in inviting those of you who wish to take part to come to my house tomorrow, at nine in the evening.'
âI'll be there, my dear Count, goodness me,' the stout marshal exclaimed, âand will probably bring a few Lithuanians. But tell me please, why should we form a partnership? Why don't the merchants?â¦'
âIf only,' the Count replied, enthusiastically, âto prevent other people from saying we do nothing but stay at home and count our dividends.'
The Prince asked to be heard: âIn any case,' he said, âwe have in mind two more partnershipsâin the grain and the spirits tradesâ¦Anyone who does not wish to belong to one can join the otherâ¦Besides, let us invite Mr Wokulski to be kind enough to take part in our committee meetings.'
âOh dear me, yes,' the would-be English Count interposed.
âAnd to illuminate our problems with his own inimitable talent,' the lawyer concluded.
âI doubt whether I can be of any use to you, gentlemen,' Wokulski replied, âI have certainly had dealings in grain and spirits, but under very different circumstances. I was concerned with large quantities and speed of delivery, not price. Besides, I am not familiar with the local grain trade.'
âThere will be specialists, my dear Mr Wokulski,' the lawyer interrupted, âthey will provide details which you need only be kind enough to put in order and illuminate with your own inimitable talentsâ¦'
âPray do so!' the Count exclaimed, and they were echoed still more loudly by the gentry who hated the magnates.
It was almost five o'clock, and they began to take leave. At this moment, Wokulski saw Mr ÅÄcki approaching him from the other room, accompanied by the same young man he had seen in the company of Izabela at the Easter collection and at the Countess's house.
âMr Wokulski, allow me', said ÅÄcki, âto introduce Mr Julian Ochockiâ¦Our cousin, you knowâ¦a trifle eccentric, but thereâ¦'
âI have long wanted to meet you,' said Ochocki, shaking hands.
Wokulski looked at him silently. The young man was not yet thirty, and was distinguished by his unusual appearance. He seemed to have the features of Napoleon, veiled by clouds of dreaminess.
âWhich way are you going?' the young man asked Wokulski, âmay I join you?'
âPlease do not troubleâ¦'
âOh, I have plenty of time,' the young man replied.
âWhat does he want of me?' Wokulski wondered, and said: âWe might go in the direction of the Åazienki park, then?'
âCertainly,' Ochocki replied, âI'll just say goodbye to the Prince and will catch up with you.'
Hardly had he gone, than the lawyer stepped up to Wokulski. âI congratulate you on a complete triumph,' he said in a low voice, âthe Prince is quite taken with you, both the Counts and the Baron tooâ¦They are all somewhat scatterbrained, as you will have noticed, but they're men of good willâ¦They want to do something, they're intelligent and educatedâbut they lack energy. A sickness of the will, my dear sir, their whole class is affected by itâ¦They have everythingâmoney, titles, respect, even success with women, so they want nothing. But without that urge, Mr Wokulski, they cannot help becoming tools in the hands of new and ambitious menâ¦We, my dear sir, we still want many things,' he added in a still lower voice, âthey are lucky to have found usâ¦'
As Wokulski did not answer, the lawyer began to regard him as a very skilled diplomat, and secretly regretted being so outspoken. âAnyway,' he thought, looking furtively at Wokulski, âeven if he repeats this to the Prince, what could the Prince do to me? I'll say I wanted to test himâ¦'
âWhat kind of ambitions does he suspect me of?' Wokulski asked himself privately.
He bade farewell to the Prince, promised to come to all future meetings and, going into the street, sent his carriage home. âWhat does this Ochocki want of me?' he thought, suspiciously, âof course he is worried about Izabelaâ¦perhaps he means to frighten me away from her?â¦Fool! If she loves him, then he need not waste words; I will go away of my own accordâ¦But if she does not love him, then let him beware of trying to remove meâ¦I have committed one capital folly in my life, for Izabela's sake. I hope it does not come down upon him, I should be sorry for the lad.'
Hasty footsteps sounded in the gateway: Wokulski turned and saw Ochocki. âWere you waiting? I'm sorry,' the young man cried.
âShall we go to the Åazienki?' Wokulski asked.
âBy all means.'
They walked for some time in silence. The young man was thinking; Wokulski was on edge. He made up his mind to take the bull by the horns: âYou are a close relative of the ÅÄckis, then?' he asked.
âFairly,' the young man replied. âMy mother was a ÅÄcka,' he explained ironically, âthough my father was merely an Ochocki. This has very much weakened any family tiesâ¦I would not be acquainted with Tomasz, who is a sort of second cousin, were it not that he has lost his money.'
âMiss ÅÄcka is a very distinguished person,' said Wokulski, gazing ahead.
âDistinguished?' Ochocki echoed, âsay rather a goddess! When I am talking to her, I think she could fill my whole life for me. Only with her do I feel at peace and forget the uneasiness that haunts me. But there! I could not sit all day long with her in a drawing-room, nor could she stay with me in my laboratory.'
Wokulski stopped: âAre you interested in physics or chemistry?' he asked in surprise.
âOh, what am I not interested in?' Ochocki replied, âphysics, chemistry, technologyâ¦I graduated in the natural sciences at the university and in mechanical engineering at the polytechnic. I am interested in everything: I read and work from morning to nightâbut do nothing. I have been able to improve the microscope a trifle, to build a new kind of electric lampâ¦'
Wokulski's surprise intensified: âSo you are Ochocki the inventor?'
âYes,' the young man replied, âbut what does that signify? Nothing. When I think that at the age of twenty-eight I have only achieved this, then despair overcomes me. I feel like smashing up my laboratory and plunging head-first into polite society, to which people are trying to attract meâor putting a bullet through my head. Ochocki's electric lampâhow absurd! To rush headlong through life and finish up with an electric lampâthat is terrible. To reach the middle of life and not find even a trace of the road along which one wants to travelâwhat despair!'
The young man fell silent and, as they were now in the Botanical Gardens, took off his hat. Wokulski looked at him attentively, and made another discovery. Though the young man looked elegant, he was not at all smart: he even seemed careless of his appearance. He had tangled hair, his tie was somewhat crooked, and a button was undone on his shirt. It seemed as if someone looked after his linen and clothes very carefully, while he himself treated them carelessly, and it was precisely this carelessness which gave him his individual charm. His every movement was involuntary, casual, but graceful. Equally graceful was his manner of looking and listeningâor rather not listeningâand even of disposing of his hat.
They went to the hillock from where the round well can be seen. Strollers surrounded them on all sides, but Ochocki did not mind them and, indicating a bench with his hat, said: âI have often read that a man with great aspirations is happy. I myself have unusual aspirations which only make me ludicrous and offend my nearest and dearest. Look at this benchâ¦Here, at the beginning of June, I was sitting with my cousin and Flora. Some moon or other was shining, and even some nightingales were singing. I was thinking of something else. Suddenly my cousin said: âDo you know anything about astronomy, cousin?'
âA littleâ¦'
âWell then, tell me what star that isâ¦'
âI don't know,' I told her, âbut one thing is certainâwe shall never reach it. Man is fastened to the earth like an oyster to a rock. At this moment,' Ochocki went on, âan idea or notion came to me. I forgot my beautiful cousin and began thinking about flying machines. And because I have to walk about when thinking, I got up and left my cousin without a wordâ¦Next day Flora called me impertinent; Mr ÅÄcki said I was eccentric and my cousin refused to speak to me for a weekâ¦And if only I had thought of something! But nothing came, nothing at all, though I could have sworn that before I reached the well a general sketch of the flying machine would come to meâ¦Stupid, wasn't it?'
âSo they spend evenings here by moonlight and with nightingales singing?' Wokulski thought, and felt a terrible anguish in his heart. Izabela is already in love with this Ochocki, or if she isn't, it is only on account of his eccentricities. Well, she is rightâhe is a handsome man, and an unusual one.
âOf course,' Ochocki went on, âI said not a word of this to my aunt who, whenever she sews a button on my shirt, says: “Julian dear, please try to please Izabela, she is exactly the wife for youâ¦Clever and beautiful: she alone can cure you of your visions.” But I wonder what sort of wife she would make me? If at least she could help me, then it would not be so badâ¦But as if she could leave a drawing-room for my laboratory! She is right, that is her proper environment: a bird needs air, a fish waterâ¦What a fine evening it is,' he added after a moment, âI am excited tonight as rarely happens. But what is wrong, Mr Wokulski?'
âI am rather tired,' Wokulski replied dully. âWe might sit down over thereâ¦'
They did so on the slope of the hillock, near the edge of the park. Ochocki leaned his chin on his knees and began pondering. Wokulski eyed him with a feeling in which admiration mingled with hatred: is he stupid or cunning? Why has he told me all this? Wokulski thought. But he had to admit that Ochocki's talk had the same frankness and extravagance as his gestures and all his person. They had just met for the first time, yet already Ochocki was talking to him as if they had known one another since childhood.
âI'll get this over with,' said Wokulski to himself, and he asked aloud, with a deep sigh: âSo you are going to marry her, Mr Ochocki?'
âI'd be insane if I didâ¦' the young man muttered with a shrug.
âHow so? After all, you like your cousin.'
âVery much indeed, but that is not all. I'd marry her if I were certain that I would never achieve anything in science.'
In addition to hatred and admiration, joy now radiated within Wokulski's heart. At this moment Ochocki rubbed his forehead as if waking up, looked at Wokulski and suddenly exclaimed: âBut thereâ¦I was forgetting I had an important question to ask you.'
âWhat does he want?' Wokulski thought, privately admiring the wise look of his rival and his sudden change of tone. It was as though another man were speaking now.
âI want to ask you a questionâno, two questions, very personal, perhaps even offensive,' said Ochocki, âwill you be offended?'
âWell?' Wokulski replied.
Had he been standing on a scaffold he would not have experienced such a terrible feeling as he did at this moment. He was certain it concerned Izabela and that his fate was about to be decided on this spot.
âYou were once interested in natural sciences?' Ochocki asked.
âYes.'
âAnd also you were enthusiastic. I know what you went through, I have long respected you for thatâ¦No, this is inadequate: I must add that for a year recollections of the difficulties you encountered have encouraged me. I told myself I would do at least as much as that man, and since I was faced with such obstacles, I would go even furtherâ¦'
Listening to this, Wokulski thought he was dreaming or listening to a madman: âHow do you know all this?' he asked Ochocki.
âFrom Dr Szuman.'
âAh, Szumanâ¦But what is it all leading up to?'
âI shall tell you,' Ochocki replied. âYou were an enthusiast of the natural sciences, but in the end you rejected them. At what age did your interest in this field weaken?'
Wokulski felt as though he had been struck by an axe. The question was so bitter and so unexpected that for a moment he could not reply or even collect his thoughts. Ochocki repeated the question, watching his companion sharply.
âAt what age?' Wokulski said, âa year agoâ¦I am now forty-six.'
âSo I have fifteen years until complete indifference sets in. That encourages me,' said Ochocki, as if to himself.
After a moment he added: âThat was one question; here's the second, but please don't be offended. At what age do men begin to feelâ¦indifferent to women?'
A second blow. For an instant Wokulski felt like seizing the young man and throttling him. But he controlled himself and replied with a faint smile: âI think they never do. In fact, women come to look increasingly desirableâ¦'
âThat's bad,' Ochocki whispered, âhaâwe shall see who is the stronger.'
âWomen are, Mr Ochockiâ¦'
âSurely that depends, my dear sir,' the young man replied, pondering again.
He began speaking as though to himself: âWomanâthere's a precious topic for you! I've been in loveâlet me see, how often? Fourâ¦sixâ¦about seven, yes, seven times. It takes up a great deal of time, and can lead a man into desperate thoughts. Love's a foolish thing. You meet, you love, you sufferâ¦Then you grow bored or are betrayedâ¦And then you find another woman. Yes, I was bored twice and betrayed three times. Then you find a different woman, better than the othersâand she behaves just like the others. Oh, what an abject race of creatures women areâ¦They play with us, though their limited minds can't even understand us. Well, it's true that even a tiger can play with a manâ¦Abject, but how delightfulâ¦But never mind this! For when an idea gains domination over a man, it will never desert him, never deceive himâ¦'