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<h2> CHAPTER XXIV. </h2>
<p>"Two days later I started for the assembly, having bid farewell to my wife
in an excellent and tranquil state of mind. In the district there was
always much to be done. It was a world and a life apart. During two days I
spent ten hours at the sessions. The evening of the second day, on
returning to my district lodgings, I found a letter from my wife, telling
me of the children, of their uncle, of the servants, and, among other
things, as if it were perfectly natural, that Troukhatchevsky had been at
the house, and had brought her the promised scores. He had also proposed
that they play again, but she had refused.</p>
<p>"For my part, I did not remember at all that he had promised any score. It
had seemed to me on Sunday evening that he took a definite leave, and for
this reason the news gave me a disagreeable surprise. I read the letter
again. There was something tender and timid about it. It produced an
extremely painful impression upon me. My heart swelled, and the mad beast
of jealousy began to roar in his lair, and seemed to want to leap upon his
prey. But I was afraid of this beast, and I imposed silence upon it.</p>
<p>"What an abominable sentiment is jealousy! 'What could be more natural
than what she has written?' said I to myself. I went to bed, thinking
myself tranquil again. I thought of the business that remained to be done,
and I went to sleep without thinking of her.</p>
<p>"During these assemblies of the Zemstvo I always slept badly in my strange
quarters. That night I went to sleep directly, but, as sometimes happens,
a sort of sudden shock awoke me. I thought immediately of her, of my
physical love for her, of Troukhatchevsky, and that between them
everything had happened. And a feeling of rage compressed my heart, and I
tried to quiet myself.</p>
<p>"'How stupid!' said I to myself; 'there is no reason, none at all. And why
humiliate ourselves, herself and myself, and especially myself, by
supposing such horrors? This mercenary violinist, known as a bad man,—shall
I think of him in connection with a respectable woman, the mother of a
family, MY wife? How silly!' But on the other hand, I said to myself: 'Why
should it not happen?'</p>
<p>"Why? Was it not the same simple and intelligible feeling in the name of
which I married, in the name of which I was living with her, the only
thing I wanted of her, and that which, consequently, others desired, this
musician among the rest? He was not married, was in good health (I
remember how his teeth ground the gristle of the cutlets, and how eagerly
he emptied the glass of wine with his red lips), was careful of his
person, well fed, and not only without principles, but evidently with the
principle that one should take advantage of the pleasure that offers
itself. There was a bond between them, music,—the most refined form
of sensual voluptuousness. What was there to restrain them? Nothing.
Everything, on the contrary, attracted them. And she, she had been and had
remained a mystery. I did not know her. I knew her only as an animal, and
an animal nothing can or should restrain. And now I remember their faces
on Sunday evening, when, after the 'Kreutzer Sonata,' they played a
passionate piece, written I know not by whom, but a piece passionate to
the point of obscenity.</p>
<p>"'How could I have gone away?' said I to myself, as I recalled their
faces. 'Was it not clear that between them everything was done that
evening? Was it not clear that between them not only there were no more
obstacles, but that both—especially she—felt a certain shame
after what had happened at the piano? How weakly, pitiably, happily she
smiled, as she wiped the perspiration from her reddened face! They already
avoided each other's eyes, and only at the supper, when she poured some
water for him, did they look at each other and smile imperceptibly.'</p>
<p>"Now I remember with fright that look and that scarcely perceptible smile.
'Yes, everything has happened,' a voice said to me, and directly another
said the opposite. 'Are you mad? It is impossible!' said the second voice.</p>
<p>"It was too painful to me to remain thus stretched in the darkness. I
struck a match, and the little yellow-papered room frightened me. I
lighted a cigarette, and, as always happens, when one turns in a circle of
inextricable contradiction, I began to smoke. I smoked cigarette after
cigarette to dull my senses, that I might not see my contradictions. All
night I did not sleep, and at five o'clock, when it was not yet light, I
decided that I could stand this strain no longer, and that I would leave
directly. There was a train at eight o'clock. I awakened the keeper who
was acting as my servant, and sent him to look for horses. To the assembly
of Zemstvo I sent a message that I was called back to Moscow by pressing
business, and that I begged them to substitute for me a member of the
Committee. At eight o'clock I got into a tarantass and started off."</p>
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