登陆注册
19626500000017

第17章 TURGeNIEFF(3)

Aunt Tanya was asked to sing. We listened with beating hearts, and waited to hear what Turgenieff, the famous connoisseur, would say about her singing. Of course he praised it, sincerely, I think. After the singing a quadrille was got up. All of a sudden, in the middle of the quadrille, Ivan Sergeyevitch, who was sitting at one side looking on, got up and took one of the ladies by the hand, and, putting his thumbs into the armholes of his waistcoat, danced a cancan according to the latest rules of Parisian art. Everyone roared with laughter, Turgenieff more than anybody.

After tea the "grown-ups" started some conversation, and a warm dispute arose among them. It was Prince Uru;sof who disputed most warmly, and "went for" Turgenieff.

Of Turgenieff's third visit I remember the woodcock shooting. This was on the second or third of May, 1880.

We all went out together beyond the Voronka, my father, my mother and all the children. My father gave Turgenieff the best place and posted himself one hundred and fifty paces away at the other end of the same glade.

My mother stood by Turgenieff, and we children lighted a bonfire not far off.

My father fired several shots and brought down two birds;

Ivan Sergeyevitch had no luck, and was envying my father's good fortune all the time. At last, when it was beginning to get dark, a woodcock flew over Turgenieff, and he shot it.

"Killed it?" called out my father.

"Fell like a stone; send your dog to pick him up," answered Ivan Sergeyevitch.

My father sent us with the dog, Turgenieff showed us where to look for the bird; but search as we might, and the dog, too, there was no woodcock to be found. At last Turgenieff came to help, and my father came; there was no woodcock there.

"Perhaps you only winged it; it may have got away along the ground," said my father, puzzled. "It is impossible that the dog shouldn't find it; he couldn't miss a bird that was killed."

"I tell you I saw it with my own eyes, Lyoff Nikolaievich; it fell like a stone. I didn't wound it; I killed it outright. I can tell the difference."

"Then why can't the dog find it? It's impossible; there's something wrong."

"I don't know anything about that," insisted Turgenieff. "You may take it from me I'm not lying; it fell like a stone where I tell you."

There was no finding the woodcock, and the incident left an unpleasant flavor, as if one or the other of them was in the wrong.

Either Turgenieff was bragging when he said that he shot it dead, or my father, in maintaining that the dog could not fail to find a bird that had been killed.

And this must needs happen just when they were both so anxious to avoid every sort of misunderstanding! That was the very reason why they had carefully fought shy of all serious conversation, and spent all their time merely amusing themselves.

When my father said good night to us that night, he whispered to us that we were to get up early and go back to the place to have a good hunt for the bird.

And what was the result? The woodcock, in falling, had caught in the fork of a branch, right at the top of an aspen-tree, and it was all we could do to knock it out from there.

When we brought it home in triumph, it was something of an "occasion," and my father and Turgenieff were far more delighted than we were. It turned out that they were both in the right, and everything ended to their mutual satisfaction.

Ivan Sergeyevitch slept down-stairs in my father's study. When the party broke up for the night, I used to see him to his room, and while he was undressing I sat on his bed and talked sport with him.

He asked me if I could shoot. I said yes, but that I didn't care to go out shooting because I had nothing but a rotten old one-barreled gun.

"I'll give you a gun," he said. "I've got two in Paris, and I have no earthly need for both. It's not an expensive gun, but it's a good one. Next time I come to Russia I'll bring it with me."

I was quite taken aback and thanked him heartily. I was tremendously delighted at the idea that I was to have a real central-fire gun.

Unfortunately, Turgenieff never came to Russia again.

I tried afterward to buy the gun he had spoken of from his legatees not in the quality of a central-fire gun, but as Turgenieff's gun; but I did not succeed.

That is all that I can remember about this delightful, naively cordial man, with the childlike eyes and the childlike laugh, and in the picture my mind preserves of him the memory of his grandeur melts into the charm of his good nature and simplicity.

In 1883 my father received from Ivan Sergeyevitch his last farewell letter, written in pencil on his death-bed, and I remember with what emotion he read it.

And when the news of his death came, my father would talk of nothing else for several days, and inquired everywhere for details of his illness and last days.

Apropos of this letter of Turgenieff's, I should like to say that my father was sincerely annoyed, when he heard applied to himself the epithet "great writer of the land of Russia," which was taken from this letter.

He always hated cliches, and he regarded this one as quite absurd.

"Why not 'writer of the land'? I never heard before that a man could be the writer of a land. People get attached to some nonsensical expression, and go on repeating it in season and out of season."

I have given extracts above from Turgenieff's letters, which show the invariable consistency with which he lauded my father's literary talents. Unfortunately, I cannot say the same of my father's attitude toward Turgenieff.

In this, too, the want of dispassionateness in his nature revealed itself. Personal relations prevented him from being objective.

In 1867, apropos of Turgenieff's "Smoke," which had just appeared, he wrote to Fet:

There is hardly any love of anything in "Smoke" and hardly any poetry. The only thing it shows love for is light and playful adultery, and for that reason the poetry of the story is repulsive.

. . . I am timid in expressing this opinion, because I cannot form a sober judgment about an author whose personality I dislike.

同类推荐
  • 中峰文选

    中峰文选

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Kingdom of Love and Other Poems

    The Kingdom of Love and Other Poems

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 续修台湾府志

    续修台湾府志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 淡新凤三县简明总括图册

    淡新凤三县简明总括图册

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 画继补遗

    画继补遗

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 神藏天启

    神藏天启

    世间最不可思议之地不是十万大山、不是浩瀚七海,也不是无尽星辰,而是人体。凡人武者修肉身,生元气,气血合为一体,气冲天灵,开灵台穴窍,开启体内神藏,这并不存在于体内任何脏腑之内。却又实实在在的存在于体内。凡人武者九品,壮体、炼血、强骨、刚柔、聚气、体变、神力,冲顶,灵变。修士神藏九阙;神阙、阴阳、混元、四相、合阳、玄通、天人、谷神、道宫。————————————————————本来取名神藏(zang),结果被占用,无奈加两个字。认真码字,求支持。老书两个完本,可以先看。
  • 七十二重生死脉

    七十二重生死脉

    他的父亲,是大陆最强天才;他的爷爷,是大陆最强武神;而他,则是大陆最弱废柴。且看人们眼中的豪门废物,如何登顶世界最高处。放眼望去,身边竟只有她,异国公主。
  • 狼道的秘密

    狼道的秘密

    当代的企业文化,大多渗透“狼性”的文化。每一个企业都想打造具备“狼性”素质的员工和团队,进而依靠狼性的敏锐嗅觉、果敢、拼搏的精神在国内外的舞台上大展拳脚。企业的发展如此,个人的进步也是如此,一个人要想在白热化的竞争中谋求生存发展,就必须向狼学习,学习狼的各种优秀素质,打造自己的过硬技能,以不屈不挠的意志、永不言败的心态、团结合作的精神、感恩社会的思想,挑战环境、挑战困难、挑战自己、挑战他人,把握机遇,应对未来。
  • 魔纹足球记

    魔纹足球记

    不一样的足球,不一样的世界,不变的是热血。看官好奇吗?没关系,慢慢看,慢慢写。
  • 九天鲲鹏诀

    九天鲲鹏诀

    凶横的狼族武士,狡猾的狈族术士;强悍的熊族战士,豪放的熊猫族酒仙;恐怖的巨鲸族力士,另类的海豚族歌者;难缠的蚕族织者,诡秘的螳族刺客;沉默的石族苦修,美丽的花族舞者……嘲讽、貔貅、霸下……龙之九子;混沌、穷奇、梼杌、饕餮,四大凶兽。没有神,没有仙,这里只有繁衍了无数代的妖族血脉。这里,是妖的世界!
  • TFboys之校草追爱

    TFboys之校草追爱

    TFboys遇见三位富家千金,便渐渐爱上了她们,一些人把这些都看在眼里,并展开了“战争”,不停地诱惑这TFboys,但他们却没有动摇,因为他们坚信自己的直觉,爱的人就是她们三个,心里容不下别人。
  • 拽公主降服冷冰川

    拽公主降服冷冰川

    他,一个风度翩翩的东方家少爷她,一个烂尾楼的穷人好学生她,考上樱逸的高材生他,被迫上学的帅冰山菲力牛排摆在心雨前面,她从容的拿出刀具,切着牛排,夜想:她的动作,好像。。。。心雨发现夜再看她,抬起头,对夜笑了笑,说“怎么了,我脸上有东西吗?”夜摆摆手说“没有”心雨点点头,又继续吃了夜想:她,好美,为什么,我看到她,就想看到。。。。她,他又去哪了??
  • 天道贵和

    天道贵和

    天之道,贵于和,顺乎本性,率性而为。水火双神,共赴凡间,七世天道之结,横亘诸般爱恋。风吹浪打,血雨腥风,诗篇如何写就?仙妖之恋,神魔之情,佳话是否能成?且看顽世的傲松、爽朗的彩绫、深情的双凤、无悔的毕方、魂残的破晓如何携手人间,演绎一场和与爱的天道之歌!
  • 天下逍遥任我游

    天下逍遥任我游

    前世,作为一个孤独画者,洛子玄一直追寻这他的画道;今生,成为一个修炼天才,洛子玄同样的追寻着,甚至放弃了他那天才的资质。某一天,一件小事让他醒悟了。他开始了修炼。当某一天,他的画道开始融入这修炼体系之时,这个世界又会因他而改变;他的一声狂吼,整个世界必将因他而颤抖.....
  • 你若安好

    你若安好

    你登竹楼听春雨,若有所思望西都,安能拨得云烟开,好让艳阳映明湖,便道新草掩湿泥,是日廊檐燕踌躇,晴雨自有天道定,天地之间唯太虚。你若安好,便是晴天……“好久不见。”男主:叶珂、杙(yi)丞、男配:朴宥飞、柯亦轩女主:卞(bian)漪洢、卞橙澄、女配:萧依阳、白婍雯、戚蕊、