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<h2> Chapter XXIII </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>lenin’s life
went on with monotonous regularity. He had little intercourse with the
commanding officers or with his equals. The position of a rich cadet in
the Caucasus was peculiarly advantageous in this respect. He was not sent
out to work, or for training. As a reward for going on an expedition he
was recommended for a commission, and meanwhile he was left in peace. The
officers regarded him as an aristocrat and behaved towards him with
dignity. Cardplaying and the officers’ carousals accompanied by the
soldier-singers, of which he had had experience when he was with the
detachment, did not seem to him attractive, and he also avoided the
society and life of the officers in the village. The life of officers
stationed in a Cossack village has long had its own definite form. Just as
every cadet or officer when in a fort regularly drinks porter, plays
cards, and discusses the rewards given for taking part in the expeditions,
so in the Cossack villages he regularly drinks chikhir with his hosts,
treats the girls to sweet-meats and honey, dangles after the Cossack
women, and falls in love, and occasionally marries there. Olenin always
took his own path and had an unconscious objection to the beaten tracks.
And here, too, he did not follow the ruts of a Caucasian officer’s
life.</p>
<p>It came quite naturally to him to wake up at daybreak. After drinking tea
and admiring from his porch the mountains, the morning, and Maryanka, he
would put on a tattered ox-hide coat, sandals of soaked raw hide, buckle
on a dagger, take a gun, put cigarettes and some lunch in a little bag,
call his dog, and soon after five o’clock would start for the forest
beyond the village. Towards seven in the evening he would return tired and
hungry with five or six pheasants hanging from his belt (sometimes with
some other animal) and with his bag of food and cigarettes untouched. If
the thoughts in his head had lain like the lunch and cigarettes in the
bag, one might have seen that during all those fourteen hours not a single
thought had moved in it. He returned morally fresh, strong, and perfectly
happy, and he could not tell what he had been thinking about all the time.
Were they ideas, memories, or dreams that had been flitting through his
mind? They were frequently all three. He would rouse himself and ask what
he had been thinking about; and would see himself as a Cossack working in
a vineyard with his Cossack wife, or an abrek in the mountains, or a boar
running away from himself. And all the time he kept peering and watching
for a pheasant, a boar, or a deer.</p>
<p>In the evening Daddy Eroshka would be sure to be sitting with him.
Vanyusha would bring a jug of chikhir, and they would converse quietly,
drink, and separate to go quite contentedly to bed. The next day he would
again go shooting, again be healthily weary, again they would sit
conversing and drink their fill, and again be happy. Sometimes on a
holiday or day of rest Olenin spent the whole day at home. Then his chief
occupation was watching Maryanka, whose every movement, without realizing
it himself, he followed greedily from his window or his porch. He regarded
Maryanka and loved her (so he thought) just as he loved the beauty of the
mountains and the sky, and he had no thought of entering into any
relations with her. It seemed to him that between him and her such
relations as there were between her and the Cossack Lukashka could not
exist, and still less such as often existed between rich officers and
other Cossack girls. It seemed to him that if he tried to do as his fellow
officers did, he would exchange his complete enjoyment of contemplation
for an abyss of suffering, disillusionment, and remorse. Besides, he had
already achieved a triumph of self-sacrifice in connexion with her which
had given him great pleasure, and above all he was in a way afraid of
Maryanka and would not for anything have ventured to utter a word of love
to her lightly.</p>
<p>Once during the summer, when Olenin had not gone out shooting but was
sitting at home, quite unexpectedly a Moscow acquaintance, a very young
man whom he had met in society, came in.</p>
<p>‘Ah, mon cher, my dear fellow, how glad I was when I heard that you were
here!’ he began in his Moscow French, and he went on intermingling
French words in his remarks. ‘They said, “Olenin”. What
Olenin? and I was so pleased.... Fancy fate bringing us together here!
Well, and how are you? How? Why?’ and Prince Beletski told his whole
story: how he had temporarily entered the regiment, how the
Commander-in-Chief had offered to take him as an adjutant, and how he
would take up the post after this campaign although personally he felt
quite indifferent about it.</p>
<p>‘Living here in this hole one must at least make a career—get a
cross—or a rank—be transferred to the Guards. That is quite
indispensable, not for myself but for the sake of my relations and
friends. The prince received me very well; he is a very decent fellow,’
said Beletski, and went on unceasingly. ‘I have been recommended for
the St. Anna Cross for the expedition. Now I shall stay here a bit until
we start on the campaign. It’s capital here. What women! Well, and
how are you getting on? I was told by our captain, Startsev you know, a
kind-hearted stupid creature.... Well, he said you were living like an
awful savage, seeing no one! I quite understand you don’t want to be
mixed up with the set of officers we have here. I am so glad now you and I
will be able to see something of one another. I have put up at the Cossack
corporal’s house. There is such a girl there. Ustenka! I tell you
she’s just charming.’</p>
<p>And more and more French and Russian words came pouring forth from that
world which Olenin thought he had left for ever. The general opinion about
Beletski was that he was a nice, good-natured fellow. Perhaps he really
was; but in spite of his pretty, good-natured face, Olenin thought him
extremely unpleasant. He seemed just to exhale that filthiness which
Olenin had forsworn. What vexed him most was that he could not—had
not the strength—abruptly to repulse this man who came from that
world: as if that old world he used to belong to had an irresistible claim
on him. Olenin felt angry with Beletski and with himself, yet against his
wish he introduced French phrases into his own conversation, was
interested in the Commander-in-Chief and in their Moscow acquaintances,
and because in this Cossack village he and Beletski both spoke French, he
spoke contemptuously of their fellow officers and of the Cossacks, and was
friendly with Beletski, promising to visit him and inviting him to drop in
to see him. Olenin however did not himself go to see Beletski. Vanyusha
for his part approved of Beletski, remarking that he was a real gentleman.</p>
<p>Beletski at once adopted the customary life of a rich officer in a Cossack
village. Before Olenin’s eyes, in one month he came to be like an
old resident of the village; he made the old men drunk, arranged evening
parties, and himself went to parties arranged by the girls—bragged
of his conquests, and even got so far that, for some unknown reason, the
women and girls began calling him grandad, and the Cossacks, to whom a man
who loved wine and women was clearly understandable, got used to him and
even liked him better than they did Olenin, who was a puzzle to them.</p>
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