devil must have put it into his head to start a
conversation with a
drunken man at night!
However, it is
evident that fate had written it
so at his birth!"
I could not get anything more out of Maksim
Maksimych; generally
speaking, he had no
liking for metaphysical disputations.
BOOK V THE THIRD EXTRACT FROM PECHORIN'S DIARY
PRINCESS MARY
CHAPTER I
11th May.
YESTERDAY I arrived at Pyatigorsk.
I have engaged lodgings at the extreme
end of the town, the highest part, at the foot of
Mount Mashuk: during a storm the clouds will
descend on to the roof of my dwelling.
This morning at five o'clock, when I opened
my window, the room was filled with the fra-
grance of the flowers growing in the
modest little
front-garden. Branches of bloom-laden bird-
cherry trees peep in at my window, and now and
again the
breeze bestrews my writing-table with
their white petals. The view which meets my
gaze on three sides is wonderful: westward
towers five-peaked Beshtau, blue as "the last
cloud of a dispersed storm,"[1] and
northward rises
Mashuk, like a
shaggy Persian cap, shutting in
the whole of that quarter of the
horizon. Eastward
the
outlook is more
cheery: down below are dis-
played the
varied hues of the brand-new, spotlessly
clean, little town, with its murmuring, health-
giving springs and its babbling, many-tongued
throng. Yonder, further away, the mountains
tower up in an amphitheatre, ever bluer and
mistier; and, at the edge of the
horizon, stretches
the silver chain of snow-clad summits, begin-
ning with Kazbek and
ending with two-peaked
Elbruz. . . Blithe is life in such a land! A feeling
akin to
rapture is diffused through all my veins.
The air is pure and fresh, like the kiss of a child;
the sun is bright, the sky is blue -- what more could
one possibly wish for? What need, in such a place
as this, of
passions, desires, regrets?
[1] Pushkin. Compare Shelley's Adonais, xxxi. 3: "as the
last cloud of an expiring storm."
However, it is time to be
stirring. I will go to
the Elizaveta spring -- I am told that the whole
society of the watering-place assembles there in
the morning.
. . . . .
Desc
ending into the middle of the town, I
walked along the
boulevard, on which I met a few
melancholy groups slowly asc
ending the moun-
tain. These, for the most part, were the families
of landed-gentry from the steppes -- as could be
guessed at once from the threadbare, old-
fashioned frock-coats of the husbands and the
exquisite
attire of the wives and daughters.
Evidently they already had all the young men of
the watering-place at their fingers' ends, because
they looked at me with a tender
curiosity. The
Petersburg cut of my coat misled them; but they
soon recognised the military epaulettes, and
turned away with indignation.
The wives of the local authorities -- the host-
esses, so to speak, of the waters -- were more
graciously inclined. They carry lorgnettes, and
they pay less attention to a uniform -- they have
grown accustomed in the Caucasus to meeting a
fervid heart beneath a numbered
button and a
cultured
intellect beneath a white forage-cap.
These ladies are very
charming, and long continue
to be
charming. Each year their adorers are
exchanged for new ones, and in that very fact, it
may be, lies the secret of their unwearying
amiability.
Asc
ending by the narrow path to the Elizaveta
spring, I
overtook a crowd of officials and military
men, who, as I
subsequentlylearned,
compose a
class apart
amongst those who place their hopes
in the medicinal waters. They drink -- but not
water -- take but few walks,
indulge in only mild
flirtations,
gamble, and
complain of boredom.
They are dandies. In letting their wicker-
sheathed
tumblers down into the well of sulphur-
ous water they assume academical poses. The
officials wear bright blue cravats; the military men
have ruffs sticking out above their collars. They
affect a
profoundcontempt for
provincial ladies,
and sigh for the
aristocratic drawing-rooms of the
capitals -- to which they are not admitted.
Here is the well at last! . . . Upon the small
square adjoining it a little house with a red roof
over the bath is erected, and somewhat further
on there is a
gallery in which the people
walk when it rains. Some wounded officers
were sitting -- pale and
melancholy -- on a bench,
with their
crutches drawn up. A few ladies,
their
tumbler of water finished, were walking
with rapid steps to and fro about the square.
There were two or three pretty faces
amongstthem. Beneath the avenues of the vines with
which the slope of Mashuk is covered, occasional
glimpses could be caught of the gay-coloured hat
of a lover of
solitude for two -- for beside that hat
I always noticed either a military forage-cap or
the ugly round hat of a
civilian. Upon the steep
cliff, where the
pavilion called "The Aeolian
Harp" is erected, figured the lovers of scenery,
directing their telescopes upon Elbruz. Amongst
them were a couple of tutors, with their pupils
who had come to be cured of scrofula.
Out of
breath, I came to a standstill at the
edge of the mountain, and, leaning against the
corner of a little house, I began to examine the
picturesque surroundings, when suddenly I heard
behind me a familiar voice.
"Pechorin! Have you been here long?"
I turned round. Grushnitski! We embraced.
I had made his
acquaintance in the active service
detachment. He had been wounded in the foot by
a
bullet and had come to the waters a week or so
before me.
Grushnitski is a cadet; he has only been a year
in the service. From a kind of foppery peculiar
to himself, he wears the thick cloak of a common