B. was the
senior captain of his
regiment. Some time before he
had been made head of the remount
establishment quartered outside
the kingdom in our southern
provinces,
whence almost all the
horses for the Polish
cavalry were drawn. For the first time
since he went away from home at the age of eighteen to begin his
military life by the battle of Friedland, Mr. Nicholas B.
breathed the air of the "Border," his native air. Unkind fate
was lying in wait for him
amongst the scenes of his youth. At
the first news of the rising in Warsaw all the remount
establishment, officers, vets., and the very troopers, were put
promptly under
arrest and
hurried off in a body beyond the
Dnieper to the nearest town in Russia proper. From there they
were dispersed to the distant parts of the Empire. On this
occasion poor Mr. Nicholas B. penetrated into Russia much farther
than he ever did in the times of Napoleonic
invasion, if much
less
willingly. Astrakhan was his
destination. He remained
there three years, allowed to live at large in the town but
having to report himself every day at noon to the military
commandant, who used to
detain him
frequently for a pipe and a
chat. It is difficult to form a just idea of what a chat with
Mr. Nicholas B. could have been like. There must have been much
compressed rage under his taciturnity, for the commandant
communicated to him the news from the theatre of war and this
news was such as it could be, that is, very bad for the Poles.
Mr. Nicholas B. received these communications with outward
phlegm, but the Russian showed a warm
sympathy for his prisoner.
"As a soldier myself I understand your feelings. You, of course,
would like to be in the thick of it. By heavens! I am fond of
you. If it were not for the terms of the military oath I would
let you go on my own
responsibility. What difference could it
make to us, one more or less of you?"
At other times he wondered with simplicity.
"Tell me, Nicholas Stepanovitch"--(my great-
grandfather's name
was Stephen and the commandant used the Russian form of polite
address)--"tell me why is it that you Poles are always looking
for trouble? What else could you expect from
running up against
Russia?"
He was
capable, too, of
philosophical reflections.
"Look at your Napoleon now. A great man. There is no denying it
that he was a great man as long as he was content to
thrash those
Germans and Austrians and all those nations. But no! He must go
to Russia looking for trouble, and what's the
consequence? Such
as you see me, I have rattled this sabre of mine on the pavements
of Paris."
After his return to Poland Mr. Nicholas B. described him as a
"worthy man but stupid,"
whenever he could be induced to speak of
the conditions of his exile. Declining the option offered him to
enter the Russian Army he was
retired with only half the pension
of his rank. His
nephew (my uncle and guardian) told me that the
first
lastingimpression on his memory as a child of four was the
glad
excitement reigning in his parents' house on the day when
Mr. Nicholas B. arrived home from his detention in Russia.
Every
generation has its memories. The first memories of Mr.
Nicholas B. might have been shaped by the events of the last
partition of Poland, and he lived long enough to suffer from the
last armed rising in 1863, an event which
affected the future of
all my
generation and has coloured my earliest
impressions. His
brother, in whose house he had sheltered for some seventeen years
his misanthropical timidity before the commonest problems of
life, having died in the early fifties, Mr. Nicholas B. had to
screw his courage up to the sticking-point and come to some
decision as to the future. After a long and agonising hesitation
he was persuaded at last to become the
tenant of some fifteen
hundred acres out of the
estate of a friend in the neighbourhood.
The terms of the lease were very
advantageous, but the
retiredsituation of the village and a plain comfortable house in good
repair were, I fancy, the greatest inducements. He lived there
quietly for about ten years,
seeing very few people and
taking no
part in the public life of the
province, such as it could be
under an
arbitrary bureaucratic
tyranny. His
character and his
patriotism were above
suspicion; but the organisers of the rising
in their
frequent journeys up and down the
province scrupulously
avoided coming near his house. It was generally felt that the
repose of the old man's last years ought not to be disturbed.
Even such intimates as my
paternalgrandfather, a comrade-in-arms
during Napoleon's Moscow
campaign and later on a fellow-officer
in the Polish Army, refrained from visiting his crony as the date
of the
outbreak approached. My
paternalgrandfather's two sons
and his only daughter were all deeply involved in the
revolutionary work; he himself was of that type of Polish squire
whose only ideal of
patriotic action was to "get into the saddle
and drive them out." But even he agreed that "dear Nicholas must
not be worried." All this
consideratecaution on the part of
friends, both conspirators and others, did not prevent Mr.
Nicholas B. being made to feel the misfortunes of that ill-omened
year.
Less than forty-eight hours after the
beginning of the rebellion
in that part of the country, a
squadron of scouting Cossacks
passed through the village and invaded the
homestead. Most of
them remained formed between the house and the stables, while
several, dismounting, ransacked the various outbuildings. The
officer in command, accompanied by two men, walked up to the
front door. All the blinds on that side were down. The officer
told the servant who received him that he wanted to see his
master. He was answered that the master was away from home,
which was
perfectly true.
I follow here the tale as told afterwards by the servant to my
grand-uncle's friends and relatives, and as I have heard it
repeated.
On receiving this answer the Cossack officer, who had been
standing in the porch, stepped into the house.
"Where is the master gone, then?"
"Our master went to J--" (the government town some fifty miles
off), "the day before yesterday."
"There are only two horses in the stables. Where are the
others?"
"Our master always travels with his own horses" (meaning: not by
post). "He will be away a week or more. He was pleased to
mention to me that he had to attend to some business in the Civil
Court."
While the servant was
speaking the officer looked about the hall.
There was a door facing him, a door to the right and a door to
the left. The officer chose to enter the room on the left and
ordered the blinds to be pulled up. It was Mr. Nicholas B.'s
study with a couple of tall bookcases, some pictures on the
walls, and so on. Besides the big centre table, with books and
papers, there was a quite small writing-table with several
drawers,
standing between the door and the window in a good
light; and at this table my grand-uncle usually sat either to
read or write.
On pulling up the blind the servant was startled by the discovery
that the whole male population of the village was massed in
front, trampling down the flower-beds. There were also a few
women
amongst them. He was glad to observe the village
priest(of the Orthodox Church) coming up the drive. The good man in
his haste had tucked up his cassock as high as the top of his
boots.
The officer had been looking at the backs of the books in the