it?'
'Yes--now or never!' thought she. 'He is bound to know of it
anyway. But now he will not
forsake me. Ah, if he should, it
would be terrible!' And she threw a
loving glance at his tall,
noble, powerful figure. She loved him now more than she had
loved the Tsar, and apart from the Imperial
dignity would not
have preferred the Emperor to him.
'Listen! I cannot
deceive you. I have to tell you. You ask
what it is? It is that I have loved before.'
She again laid her hand on his with an imploring
gesture. He was
silent.
'You want to know who it was? It was--the Emperor.'
'We all love him. I can imagine you, a
schoolgirl at the
Institute . . .'
'No, it was later. I was infatuated, but it passed . . . I must
tell you . . .'
'Well, what of it?'
'No, it was not simply--' She covered her face with her hands.
'What? You gave yourself to him?'
She was silent.
'His mistress?'
She did not answer.
He
sprang up and stood before her with trembling jaws, pale as
death. He now remembered how the Emperor, meeting him on the
Nevsky, had amiably congratulated him.
'O God, what have I done! Stiva!'
'Don't touch me! Don't touch me! Oh, how it pains!'
He turned away and went to the house. There he met her mother.
'What is the matter, Prince? I . . .' She became silent on
seeing his face. The blood had suddenly rushed to his head.
'You knew it, and used me to
shield them! If you weren't a woman
. . . !' he cried, lifting his
enormous fist, and turning aside
he ran away.
Had his fiancee's lover been a private person he would have
killed him, but it was his
beloved Tsar.
Next day he
applied both for furlough and his
discharge, and
professing to be ill, so as to see no one, he went away to the
country.
He spent the summer at his village arranging his affairs. When
summer was over he did not return to Petersburg, but entered a
monastery and there became a monk.
His mother wrote to try to dissuade him from this
decisive step,
but he replied that he felt God's call which transcended all
other considerations. Only his sister, who was as proud and
ambitious as he, understood him.
She understood that he had become a monk in order to be above
those who considered themselves his superiors. And she understood
him
correctly. By becoming a monk he showed
contempt for all
that seemed most important to others and had seemed so to him
while he was in the service, and he now ascended a
height from
which he could look down on those he had
formerly envied. . . .
But it was not this alone, as his sister Varvara
supposed, that
influenced him. There was also in him something else--a sincere
religious feeling which Varvara did not know, which intertwined
itself with the feeling of pride and the desire for pre-eminence,
and guided him. His disillusionment with Mary, whom he had
thought of
angelicpurity, and his sense of
injury, were so
strong that they brought him to
despair, and the
despair led
him--to what? To God, to his childhood's faith which had never
been destroyed in him.
II
Kasatsky entered the
monastery on the feast of the Intercession
of the Blessed Virgin. The Abbot of that
monastery was a
gentleman by birth, a
learnedwriter and a starets, that is, he
belonged to that
succession of monks originating in Walachia who
each choose a
director and teacher whom they implicitly obey.
This Superior had been a
disciple of the starets Ambrose, who was
a
disciple of Makarius, who was a
disciple of the starets Leonid,
who was a
disciple of Paussy Velichkovsky.
To this Abbot Kasatsky submitted himself as to his chosen
director. Here in the
monastery, besides the feeling of
ascendency over others that such a life gave him, he felt much as
he had done in the world: he found
satisfaction in
attaining the
greatest possible
perfection outwardly as well as
inwardly. As
in the
regiment he had been not merely an irreproachable officer
but had even exceeded his duties and widened the borders of
perfection, so also as a monk he tried to be perfect, and was
always
industrious, abstemious, submissive, and meek, as well as
pure both in deed and in thought, and
obedient. This last
quality in particular made life far easier for him. If many of
the demands of life in the
monastery, which was near the capital
and much frequented, did not please him and were
temptations to
him, they were all nullified by
obedience: 'It is not for me to
reason; my business is to do the task set me, whether it be
standing beside the relics, singing in the choir, or making up
accounts in the
monastery guest-house.' All
possibility of doubt
about anything was silenced by
obedience to the starets. Had it
not been for this, he would have been oppressed by the length and
monotony of the church services, the
bustle of the many visitors,
and the bad qualities of the other monks. As it was, he not only
bore it all
joyfully but found in it
solace and support. 'I
don't know why it is necessary to hear the same prayers several
times a day, but I know that it is necessary; and
knowing this I
find joy in them.' His
director told him that as material food
is necessary for the
maintenance of the life of the body, so
spiritual food--the church prayers--is necessary for the
maintenance of the
spiritual life. He believed this, and though
the church services, for which he had to get up early in the
morning, were a difficulty, they certainly calmed him and gave
him joy. This was the result of his
consciousness of
humility,
and the
certainty that
whatever he had to do, being fixed by the
starets, was right.
The interest of his life consisted not only in an ever greater
and greater subjugation of his will, but in the
attainment" target="_blank" title="n.达到;得到;造诣">
attainment of all
the Christian virtues, which at first seemed to him easily
attainable. He had given his whole
estate to his sister and did
not regret it, he had no personal claims,
humility towards his
inferiors was not merely easy for him but afforded him pleasure.
Even
victory over the sins of the flesh, greed and lust, was
easily
attained. His
director had
specially warned him against
the latter sin, but Kasatsky felt free from it and was glad.
One thing only tormented him--the
remembrance of his fiancee; and
not merely the
remembrance but the vivid image of what might have
been. Involuntarily he recalled a lady he knew who had been a
favourite of the Emperor's, but had afterwards married and become
an
admirable wife and mother. The husband had a high position,
influence and honour, and a good and
penitent wife.
In his better hours Kasatsky was not disturbed by such thoughts,
and when he recalled them at such times he was merely glad to
feel that the
temptation was past. But there were moments when
all that made up his present life suddenly grew dim before him,
moments when, if he did not cease to believe in the aims he had
set himself, he ceased to see them and could evoke no confidence
in them but was seized by a
remembrance of, and--terrible to
say--a regret for, the change of life he had made.
The only thing that saved him in that state of mind was
obedienceand work, and the fact that the whole day was occupied by prayer.
He went through the usual forms of prayer, he bowed in prayer, he
even prayed more than usual, but it was lip-service only and his
soul was not in it. This condition would continue for a day, or
sometimes for two days, and would then pass of itself. But those
days were
dreadful. Kasatsky felt that he was neither in his own