“What is the matter with you?” he asked Nikolai Petrovich. “You are as white as a ghost; you must be unwell. Why don’t you go to bed?”
Nikolai said a few words to his brother about his state of mind and moved away.
Pavel Petrovich walked on to the end of the garden, also deep in thought, and he, too, raised his eyes to the sky — but his beautiful dark eyes reflected only the light of the stars.
He was not born a romantic idealist, and his fastidiously dry though ardent soul, with its tinge of French scepticism, was not addicted to dreaming . . .
“Do you know what?” Bazarov was saying to Arkady that very night. “I’ve had a splendid idea.
Your father was saying today that he had received an invitation from that illustrious relative of yours.
Your father doesn’t want to go, but why shouldn’t we be off to X? You know the man invites you as well.
You see what fine weather it is; we’ll stroll around and look at the town.
Let’s have a jaunt for five or six days, no more.
“And you’ll come back here afterwards?”
“No, I must go to my father’s.
You know he lives about twenty miles from X.
I’ve not seen him or my mother for a long time; I must cheer the old people up.
They’ve been good to me, my father particularly; he’s awfully funny.
I’m their only one.
“Will you stay long with them?”
“I don’t think so.
It will be dull, of course.
“And you’ll come to us again on your way back.”
“I don’t know . . . we’ll see.
Well, what do you say?
Shall we go?”
“If you like,” answered Arkady languidly.
In his heart he was overjoyed by his friend’s suggestion, but thought it a duty to conceal his feeling.
He was not a nihilist for nothing!
The next day he set off with Bazarov to X.
The younger members of the household at Maryino were sorry about their departure; Dunyasha even wept . . . but the older people breathed more freely.
Chapter 12
The town of X. to which our friends set off was under the jurisdiction of a governor, who was still a young man, and who was at once progressive and despotic, as so often happens with Russians.
Before the end of the first year of his governorship, he had managed to quarrel not only with the marshal of nobility, a retired guards-officer, who kept open house and a stud of horses, but even with his own subordinates.
The resulting feuds at length grew to such proportions that the ministry in Petersburg found it necessary to send a trusted official with a commission to investigate everything on the spot.
The choice of the authorities fell on Matvei Ilyich Kolyazin, the son of that Kolyazin under whose protection the brothers Kirsanov had been when they were students in Petersburg.
He was also a “young man,” that is to say, he was only just over forty, but he was well on the way to becoming a statesman and already wore two stars on his breast — admittedly, one of them was a foreign star and not of the first magnitude.
Like the governor, upon whom he had come to pass judgment, he was considered a “progressive,” and though he was already a bigwig he was not altogether like the majority of bigwigs.
Of himself he had the highest opinion, his vanity knew no bounds, but his manners were simple, he had a friendly face, he listened indulgently and laughed so good-naturedly that on first acquaintance he might even have been taken for “a jolly good fellow.”
On important occasions, however, he knew, so to speak, how to make his authority felt.
“Energy is essential,” he used to say then; “l’energie est la premiere qualite d’un homme d’etat“ yet in spite of all that, he was habitually cheated, and any thoroughly experienced official could twist him round his finger.
Matvei Ilyich used to speak with great respect about Guizot, and tried to impress everyone with the idea that he did not belong to the class of routine officials and old-fashioned bureaucrats, that not a single phenomenon of social life escaped his attention . . . He was quite at home with phrases of the latter kind.
He even followed (with a certain casual condescension, it is true) the development of contemporary literature — as a grown-up man who meets a crowd of street urchins will sometimes join them out of curiosity.
In reality, Matvei Ilyich had not got much further than those politicians of the time of Alexander I, who used to prepare for an evening party at Madame Svyechin’s by reading a page of Condillac; only his methods were different and more modern.
He was a skillful courtier, and extremely cunning hypocrite, and little more; he had no aptitude for handling public affairs, and his intellect was scanty, but he knew how to manage his own affairs successfully; no one could get the better of him there, and of course, that is a most important thing.
Matvei Ilyich received Arkady with the amiability, or should we say playfulness, characteristic of the enlightened higher official.
He was astonished, however, when he heard that both the cousins he had invited had stayed at home in the country.
“Your father was always a queer fellow,” he remarked, playing with the tassels of his magnificent velvet dressing gown, and turning suddenly to a young official in a faultlessly buttoned-up uniform, he shouted with an air of concern,
“What?”
The young man, whose lips were almost glued together from prolonged silence, came forward and looked in perplexity at his chief . . .
But having embarrassed his subordinate, Matvei Ilyich paid him no further attention.
Our higher officials are fond of upsetting their subordinates, and they resort to quite varied means of achieving that end.
The following method, among others, is often used, “is quite a favorite,” as the English say: a high official suddenly ceases to understand the simplest words and pretends to be deaf; he asks, for instance, what day of the week it is.
He is respectfully informed,