The Daughter of the Commandant - Page 3/87

My father came in just at the very moment when I was tying a tail to the

Cape of Good Hope.

At the sight of my geographical studies he boxed my ears sharply, sprang

forward to Beaupre's bed, and, awaking him without any consideration, he

began to assail him with reproaches. In his trouble and confusion

Beaupre vainly strove to rise; the poor "outchitel" was dead drunk.

My father pulled him up by the collar of his coat, kicked him out of the

room, and dismissed him the same day, to the inexpressible joy of

Saveliitch.

Thus was my education finished.

I lived like a stay-at-home son (nedoross'l),[4] amusing myself by

scaring the pigeons on the roofs, and playing leapfrog with the lads of

the courtyard,[5] till I was past the age of sixteen. But at this age my

life underwent a great change.

One autumn day, my mother was making honey jam in her parlour, while,

licking my lips, I was watching the operations, and occasionally tasting

the boiling liquid. My father, seated by the window, had just opened the

Court Almanack, which he received every year. He was very fond of

this book; he never read it except with great attention, and it had the

power of upsetting his temper very much. My mother, who knew all his

whims and habits by heart, generally tried to keep the unlucky book

hidden, so that sometimes whole months passed without the Court

Almanack falling beneath his eye. On the other hand, when he did chance

to find it, he never left it for hours together. He was now reading it,

frequently shrugging his shoulders, and muttering, half aloud-"General! He was sergeant in my company. Knight of the Orders of Russia!

Was it so long ago that we--"

At last my father threw the Almanack away from him on the sofa, and

remained deep in a brown study, which never betokened anything good.

"Avdotia Vassilieva,"[6] said he, sharply addressing my mother, "how

old is Petrousha?"[7] "His seventeenth year has just begun," replied my mother. "Petrousha was

born the same year our Aunt Anastasia Garasimofna[8] lost an eye, and

that--"

"All right," resumed my father; "it is time he should serve. 'Tis time

he should cease running in and out of the maids' rooms and climbing into

the dovecote."

The thought of a coming separation made such an impression on my mother

that she dropped her spoon into her saucepan, and her eyes filled with

tears. As for me, it is difficult to express the joy which took

possession of me. The idea of service was mingled in my mind with the

liberty and pleasures offered by the town of Petersburg. I already saw

myself officer of the Guard, which was, in my opinion, the height of

human happiness.