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THE BISHOP
by Anton Chekhov
I
THE evening service was being celebrated on the eve of Palm Sunday in
the Old Petrovsky Convent. When they began distributing the palm it was
close upon ten o'clock, the candles were burning dimly, the wicks wanted
snuffing; it was all in a sort of mist. In the twilight of the church the
crowd seemed heaving like the sea, and to Bishop Pyotr, who had been
unwell for the last three days, it seemed that all the faces -- old and
young, men's and women's -- were alike, that everyone who came up for the
palm had the same expression in his eyes. In the mist he could not see the
doors; the crowd kept moving and looked as though there were no end to it.
The female choir was singing, a nun was reading the prayers for the day.
How stifling, how hot it was! How long the service went on! Bishop
Pyotr was tired. His breathing was laboured and rapid, his throat was
parched, his shoulders ached with weariness, his legs were trembling. And
it disturbed him unpleasantly when a religious maniac uttered occasional
shrieks in the gallery. And then all of a sudden, as though in a dream or
delirium, it seemed to the bishop as though his own mother Marya
Timofyevna, whom he had not seen for nine years, or some old woman just
like his mother, came up to him out of the crowd, and, after taking a palm
branch from him, walked away looking at him all the while good-humouredly
with a kind, joyful smile until she was lost in the crowd. And for some
reason tears flowed down his face. There was peace in his heart,
everything was well, yet he kept gazing fixedly towards the left choir,
where the prayers were being read, where in the dusk of evening you could
not recognize anyone, and -- wept. Tears glistened on his face and on his
beard. Here someone close at hand was weeping, then someone else farther
away, then others and still others, and little by little the church was
filled with soft weeping. And a little later, within five minutes, the
nuns' choir was singing; no one was weeping and everything was as before.
Soon the service was over. When the bishop got into his carriage to
drive home, the gay, melodious chime of the heavy, costly bells was
filling the whole garden in the moonlight. The white walls, the white
crosses on the tombs, the white birch-trees and black shadows, and the
far-away moon in the sky exactly over the convent, seemed now living their
own life, apart and incomprehensible, yet very near to man. It was the
beginning of April, and after the warm spring day it turned cool; there
was a faint touch of frost, and the breath of spring could be felt in the
soft, chilly air. The road from the convent to the town was sandy, the
horses had to go at a walking pace, and on both sides of the carriage in
the brilliant, peaceful moonlight there were people trudging along home
from church through the sand. And all was silent, sunk in thought;
everything around seemed kindly, youthful, akin, everything -- trees and
sky and even the moon, and one longed to think that so it would be always.
At last the carriage drove into the town and rumbled along the
principal street. The shops were already shut, but at Erakin's, the
millionaire shopkeeper's, they were trying the new electric lights, which
flickered brightly, and a crowd of people were gathered round. Then came
wide, dark, deserted streets, one after another; then the highroad, the
open country, the fragrance of pines. And suddenly there rose up before
the bishop's eyes a white turreted wall, and behind it a tall belfry in
the full moonlight, and beside it five shining, golden cupolas: this was
the Pankratievsky Monastery, in which Bishop
Pyotr lived. And here, too, high above the monastery, was the silent,
dreamy moon. The carriage drove in at the gate, crunching over the sand;
here and there in the moonlight there were glimpses of dark monastic
figures, and there was the sound of footsteps on the flag-stones. . . .
"You know, your holiness, your mamma arrived while you were
away," the lay brother informed the bishop as he went into his cell.
"My mother? When did she come?"
"Before the evening service. She asked first where you were and
then she went to the convent."
"Then it was her I saw in the church, just now! Oh, Lord!"
And the bishop laughed with joy.
"She bade me tell your holiness," the lay brother went on,
"that she would come to-morrow. She had a little girl with her -- her
grandchild, I suppose. They are staying at Ovsyannikov's inn."
"What time is it now?"
"A little after eleven."
"Oh, how vexing!"
The bishop sat for a little while in the parlour, hesitating, and as it
were refusing to believe it was so late. His arms and legs were stiff, his
head ached. He was hot and uncomfortable. After resting a little he went
into his bedroom, and there, too, he sat a little, still thinking of his
mother; he could hear the lay brother going away, and Father Sisoy
coughing the other side of the wall. The monastery clock struck a quarter.
The bishop changed his clothes and began reading the prayers before
sleep. He read attentively those old, long familiar prayers, and at the
same time thought about his mother. She had nine children and about forty
grandchildren. At one time, she had lived with her husband, the deacon, in
a poor village; she had lived there a very long time from the age of
seventeen to sixty. The bishop remembered her from early childhood, almost
from the age of three, and -- how he had loved her! Sweet, precious
childhood, always fondly remembered! Why did it, that long-past time that
could never return, why did it seem brighter, fuller, and more festive
than it had really been? When in his childhood or youth he had been ill,
how tender and sympathetic his mother had been! And now his prayers
mingled with the memories, which gleamed more and more brightly like a
flame, and the prayers did not hinder his thinking of his mother.
When he had finished his prayers he undressed and lay down, and at
once, as soon as it was dark, there rose before his mind his dead father,
his mother, his native village Lesopolye . . . the creak of wheels, the
bleat of sheep, the church bells on bright summer mornings, the gypsies
under the window -- oh, how sweet to think of it! He remembered the priest
of Lesopolye, Father Simeon -- mild, gentle, kindly; he was a lean little
man, while his son, a divinity student, was a huge fellow and talked in a
roaring bass voice. The priest's son had flown into a rage with the cook
and abused her: "Ah, you Jehud's ass!"
and Father Simeon overhearing it, said not a word, and was only ashamed
because he could not remember where such an ass was mentioned in the
Bible. After him the priest at Lesopolye had been Father Demyan, who used
to drink heavily, and at times drank till he saw green snakes, and was
even nicknamed Demyan Snakeseer. The schoolmaster at Lesopolye was Matvey
Nikolaitch, who had been a divinity student, a kind and intelligent man,
but he, too, was a drunkard; he never beat the schoolchildren, but for
some reason he always had hanging on his wall a bunch of birch-twigs, and
below it an utterly meaningless inscription in Latin: "Betula
kinderbalsamica secuta." He had a shaggy black dog whom he
called Syntax.
And his holiness laughed. Six miles from Lesopolye was the village
Obnino with a wonder-working ikon. In the summer they used to carry the
ikon in procession about the neighbouring villages and ring the bells the
whole day long; first in one village and then in another, and it used to
seem to the bishop then that joy was quivering in the air, and he (in
those days his name was Pavlusha) used to follow the ikon, bareheaded and
barefoot, with naïve faith, with a naïve smile, infinitely happy. In
Obnino, he remembered now, there were always a lot of people, and the
priest there, Father Alexey, to save time during mass, used to make his
deaf nephew Ilarion read the names of those
for whose health or whose souls' peace prayers were asked. Ilarion used to
read them, now and then getting a five or ten kopeck piece for the
service, and only when he was grey and bald, when life was nearly over, he
suddenly saw written on one of the pieces of paper: "What a fool you
are, Ilarion." Up to fifteen at least Pavlusha was undeveloped and
idle at his lessons, so much so that they thought of taking him away from
the clerical school and putting him into a shop; one day, going to the
post at Obnino for letters, he had stared a long time at the post-office
clerks and asked: "Allow me to ask, how do you get your salary, every
month or every day?"
His holiness crossed himself and turned over on the other side, trying
to stop thinking and go to sleep.
"My mother has come," he remembered and laughed.
The moon peeped in at the window, the floor was lighted up, and there
were shadows on it. A cricket was chirping. Through the wall Father Sisoy
was snoring in the next room, and his aged snore had a sound that
suggested loneliness, forlornness, even vagrancy. Sisoy had once been
housekeeper to the bishop of the diocese, and was called now "the
former Father Housekeeper"; he was seventy years old, he lived in a
monastery twelve miles from the town and stayed sometimes in the town,
too. He had come to the Pankratievsky Monastery three days before, and the
bishop had kept him that he might talk to him at his leisure about matters
of business, about the arrangements here. . . .
At half-past one they began ringing for matins. Father Sisoy could be
heard coughing, muttering something in a discontented voice, then he got
up and walked barefoot about the rooms.
"Father Sisoy," the bishop called.
Sisoy went back to his room and a little later made his appearance in
his boots, with a candle; he had on his cassock over his underclothes and
on his head was an old faded skull-cap.
"I can't sleep," said the bishop, sitting up. "I must be
unwell. And what it is I don't know. Fever!"
"You must have caught cold, your holiness. You must be rubbed with
tallow." Sisoy stood a little and yawned. "O Lord, forgive me, a
sinner."
"They had the electric lights on at Erakin's today," he said;
"I don't like it!"
Father Sisoy was old, lean, bent, always dissatisfied with something,
and his eyes were angry-looking and prominent as a crab's.
"I don't like it," he said, going away. "I don't like
it. Bother it!"
II
Next day, Palm Sunday, the bishop took the service in the cathedral in
the town, then he visited the bishop of the diocese, then visited a very
sick old lady, the widow of a general, and at last drove home. Between one
and two o'clock he had welcome visitors dining with him -- his mother and
his niece Katya, a child of eight years old. All dinner-time the spring
sunshine was streaming in at the windows, throwing bright light on the
white tablecloth and on Katya's red hair. Through the double windows they
could hear the noise of the rooks and the notes of the starlings in the
garden.
"It is nine years since we have met," said the old lady.
"And when I looked at you in the monastery yesterday, good Lord!
you've not changed a bit, except maybe you are thinner and your beard is a
little longer. Holy Mother, Queen of Heaven! Yesterday at the evening
service no one could help crying. I, too, as I looked at you, suddenly
began crying, though I couldn't say why. His Holy Will!"
And in spite of the affectionate tone in which she said this, he could
see she was constrained as though she were uncertain whether to address
him formally or familiarly, to laugh or not, and that she felt herself
more a deacon's widow than his mother. And Katya gazed without blinking at
her uncle, his holiness, as though trying to discover what sort of a
person he was. Her hair sprang up from under the comb and the velvet
ribbon and stood out like a halo; she had a turned-up nose and sly eyes.
The child had broken a glass before sitting down to dinner, and now her
grandmother, as she talked, moved away from Katya first a wineglass and
then a tumbler. The bishop listened to his mother and remembered how many,
many years ago she used to take him and his brothers and sisters to
relations whom she considered rich; in those days she was taken up with
the care of her children, now with her grandchildren, and she had brought
Katya. . . .
"Your sister, Varenka, has four children," she told him;
"Katya, here, is the eldest. And your brother-in-law Father Ivan fell
sick, God knows of what, and died three days before the Assumption; and my
poor Varenka is left a beggar."
"And how is Nikanor getting on?" the bishop asked about his
eldest brother.
"He is all right, thank God. Though he has nothing much, yet he
can live. Only there is one thing: his son, my grandson Nikolasha, did not
want to go into the Church; he has gone to the university to be a doctor.
He thinks it is better; but who knows! His Holy Will!"
"Nikolasha cuts up dead people," said Katya, spilling water
over her knees.
"Sit still, child," her grandmother observed calmly, and took
the glass out of her hand. "Say a prayer, and go on eating."
"How long it is since we have seen each other!" said the
bishop, and he tenderly stroked his mother's hand and shoulder; "and
I missed you abroad, mother, I missed you dreadfully."
"Thank you."
"I used to sit in the evenings at the open window, lonely and
alone; often there was music playing, and all at once I used to be
overcome with homesickness and felt as though I would give everything only
to be at home and see you."
His mother smiled, beamed, but at once she made a grave face and said:
"Thank you."
His mood suddenly changed. He looked at his mother and could not
understand how she had come by that respectfulness, that timid expression
of face: what was it for? And he did not recognize her. He felt sad and
vexed. And then his head ached just as it had the day before; his legs
felt fearfully tired, and the fish seemed to him stale and tasteless; he
felt thirsty all the time. . . .
After dinner two rich ladies, landowners, arrived and sat for an hour
and a half in silence with rigid countenances; the archimandrite,
a silent, rather deaf man, came to see him about business. Then they began
ringing for vespers; the sun was setting behind the wood and the day was
over. When he returned from church, he hurriedly said his prayers, got
into bed, and wrapped himself up as warm as possible.
It was disagreeable to remember the fish he had eaten at dinner. The
moonlight worried him, and then he heard talking. In an adjoining room,
probably in the parlour, Father Sisoy was talking politics:
"There's war among the Japanese now.
They are fighting. The Japanese, my good soul, are the same as the Montenegrins;
they are the same race. They were under the Turkish yoke together."
And then he heard the voice of Marya Timofyevna:
"So, having said our prayers and drunk tea, we went, you know, to
Father Yegor at Novokatnoye, so. . ."
And she kept on saying, "having had tea" or "having
drunk tea," and it seemed as though the only thing she had done in
her life was to drink tea.
The bishop slowly, languidly, recalled the seminary, the academy. For
three years he had been Greek teacher in the seminary: by that time he
could not read without spectacles. Then he had become a monk; he had been
made a school inspector. Then he had defended his thesis for his degree.
When he was thirty-two he had been made rector of the seminary, and
consecrated archimandrite: and then his life had been so easy, so
pleasant; it seemed so long, so long, no end was in sight. Then he had
begun to be ill, had grown very thin and almost blind, and by the advice
of the doctors had to give up everything and go abroad.
"And what then?" asked Sisoy in the next room.
"Then we drank tea . . ." answered Marya Timofyevna.
"Good gracious, you've got a green beard," said Katya
suddenly in surprise, and she laughed.
The bishop remembered that the grey-headed Father Sisoy's beard really
had a shade of green in it, and he laughed.
"God have mercy upon us, what we have to put up with with this
girl!" said Sisoy, aloud, getting angry. " Spoilt child! Sit
quiet!"
The bishop remembered the perfectly new white church in which he had
conducted the services while living abroad, he remembered the sound of the
warm sea. In his flat he had five lofty light rooms; in his study he had a
new writing-table, lots of books. He had read a great deal and often
written. And he remembered how he had pined for his native land, how a
blind beggar woman had played the guitar under his window every day and
sung of love, and how, as he listened, he had always for some reason
thought of the past. But eight years had passed and he had been called
back to Russia, and now he was a suffragan bishop,
and all the past had retreated far away into the mist as though it were a
dream. . . .
Father Sisoy came into the bedroom with a candle.
"I say!" he said, wondering, "are you asleep already,
your holiness?"
"What is it?"
"Why, it's still early, ten o'clock or less. I bought a candle
to-day; I wanted to rub you with tallow."
"I am in a fever . . ." said the bishop, and he sat up.
"I really ought to have something. My head is bad. . . ."
Sisoy took off the bishop's shirt and began rubbing his chest and back
with tallow.
"That's the way . . . that's the way . . ." he said.
"Lord Jesus Christ . . . that's the way. I walked to the town to-day;
I was at what's-his-name's -- the chief priest Sidonsky's. . . . I had tea
with him. I don't like him. Lord Jesus Christ. . . . That's the way. I
don't like him."
III
The bishop of the diocese, a very fat old man, was ill with rheumatism
or gout, and had been in bed for over a month. Bishop Pyotr went to see
him almost every day, and saw all who came to ask his help. And now that
he was unwell he was struck by the emptiness, the triviality of everything
which they asked and for which they wept; he was vexed at their ignorance,
their timidity; and all this useless, petty business oppressed him by the
mass of it, and it seemed to him that now he understood the diocesan
bishop, who had once in his young days written on "The Doctrines of
the Freedom of the Will," and now seemed to be all lost in
trivialities, to have forgotten everything, and to have no thoughts of
religion. The bishop must have lost touch with Russian life while he was
abroad; he did not find it easy; the peasants seemed to him coarse, the
women who sought his help dull and stupid, the seminarists and their
teachers uncultivated and at times savage. And the documents coming in and
going out were reckoned by tens of thousands; and what documents they
were! The higher clergy in the whole diocese gave the priests, young and
old, and even their wives and children, marks for their behaviour -- a five,
a four, and sometimes even a three; and about this he had to talk
and to read and write serious reports. And there was positively not one
minute to spare; his soul was troubled all day long, and the bishop was
only at peace when he was in church.
He could not get used, either, to the awe which, through no wish of his
own, he inspired in people in spite of his quiet, modest disposition. All
the people in the province seemed to him little, scared, and guilty when
he looked at them. Everyone was timid in his presence, even the old chief
priests; everyone "flopped" at his feet, and not long previously
an old lady, a village priest's wife who had come to consult him, was so
overcome by awe that she could not utter a single word, and went empty
away. And he, who could never in his sermons bring himself to speak ill of
people, never reproached anyone because he was so sorry for them, was
moved to fury with the people who came to consult him, lost his temper and
flung their petitions on the floor. The whole time he had been here, not
one person had spoken to him genuinely, simply, as to a human being; even
his old mother seemed now not the same! And why, he wondered, did she
chatter away to Sisoy and laugh so much; while with him, her son, she was
grave and usually silent and constrained, which did not suit her at all.
The only person who behaved freely with him and said what he meant was old
Sisoy, who had spent his whole life in the presence of bishops and had
outlived eleven of them. And so the bishop was at ease with him, although,
of course, he was a tedious and nonsensical man.
After the service on Tuesday, his holiness Pyotr was in the diocesan
bishop's house receiving petitions there; he got excited and angry, and
then drove home. He was as unwell as before; he longed to be in bed, but
he had hardly reached home when he was informed that a young merchant
called Erakin, who subscribed liberally to charities, had come to see him
about a very important matter. The bishop had to see him. Erakin stayed
about an hour, talked very loud, almost shouted, and it was difficult to
understand what he said.
"God grant it may," he said as he went away. "Most
essential! According to circumstances, your holiness! I trust it
may!"
After him came the Mother Superior from a distant convent. And when she
had gone they began ringing for vespers. He had to go to church.
In the evening the monks sang harmoniously, with inspiration. A young
priest with a black beard conducted the service; and the bishop, hearing
of the Bridegroom who comes at midnight and
of the Heavenly Mansion adorned for the festival, felt no repentance for
his sins, no tribulation, but peace at heart and tranquillity. And he was
carried back in thought to the distant past, to his childhood and youth,
when, too, they used to sing of the Bridegroom and of the Heavenly
Mansion; and now that past rose up before him -- living, fair, and joyful
as in all likelihood it never had been. And perhaps in the other world, in
the life to come, we shall think of the distant past, of our life here,
with the same feeling. Who knows? The bishop was sitting near the altar.
It was dark; tears flowed down his face. He thought that here he had
attained everything a man in his position could attain; he had faith and
yet everything was not clear, something was lacking still. He did not want
to die; and he still felt that he had missed what was most important,
something of which he had dimly dreamed in the past; and he was troubled
by the same hopes for the future as he had felt in childhood, at the
academy and abroad.
"How well they sing to-day!" he thought, listening to the
singing. "How nice it is!"
IV
On Thursday he celebrated mass in the cathedral; it was the Washing of
Feet. When the service was over and the people were going home, it was
sunny, warm; the water gurgled in the gutters, and the unceasing trilling
of the larks, tender, telling of peace, rose from the fields outside the
town. The trees were already awakening and smiling a welcome, while above
them the infinite, fathomless blue sky stretched into the distance, God
knows whither.
On reaching home his holiness drank some tea, then changed his clothes,
lay down on his bed, and told the lay brother to close the shutters on the
windows. The bedroom was darkened. But what weariness, what pain in his
legs and his back, a chill heavy pain, what a noise in his ears! He had
not slept for a long time -- for a very long time, as it seemed to him
now, and some trifling detail which haunted his brain as soon as his eyes
were closed prevented him from sleeping. As on the day before, sounds
reached him from the adjoining rooms through the walls, voices, the jingle
of glasses and teaspoons. . . . Marya Timofyevna was gaily telling Father
Sisoy some story with quaint turns of speech, while the latter answered in
a grumpy, ill-humoured voice: "Bother them! Not likely! What
next!" And the bishop again felt vexed and then hurt that with other
people his old mother behaved in a simple, ordinary way, while with him,
her son, she was shy, spoke little, and did not say what she meant, and
even, as he fancied, had during all those three days kept trying in his
presence to find an excuse for standing up, because she was embarrassed at
sitting before him. And his father? He, too, probably, if he had been
living, would not have been able to utter a word in the bishop's presence.
. . .
Something fell down on the floor in the adjoining room and was broken;
Katya must have dropped a cup or a saucer, for Father Sisoy suddenly spat
and said angrily:
"What a regular nuisance the child is! Lord forgive my
transgressions! One can't provide enough for her."
Then all was quiet, the only sounds came from outside. And when the
bishop opened his eyes he saw Katya in his room, standing motionless,
staring at him. Her red hair, as usual, stood up from under the comb like
a halo.
"Is that you, Katya?" he asked. "Who is it downstairs
who keeps opening and shutting a door?"
"I don't hear it," answered Katya; and she listened.
"There, someone has just passed by."
"But that was a noise in your stomach, uncle."
He laughed and stroked her on the head.
"So you say Cousin Nikolasha cuts up dead people?" he asked
after a pause.
"Yes, he is studying."
"And is he kind?"
"Oh, yes, he's kind. But he drinks vodka awfully."
"And what was it your father died of?"
"Papa was weak and very, very thin, and all at once his throat was
bad. I was ill then, too, and brother Fedya; we all had bad throats. Papa
died, uncle, and we got well."
Her chin began quivering, and tears gleamed in her eyes and trickled
down her cheeks.
"Your holiness," she said in a shrill voice, by now weeping
bitterly, "uncle, mother and all of us are left very wretched. . . .
Give us a little money . . . do be kind . . . uncle darling. . . ."
He, too, was moved to tears, and for a long time was too much touched
to speak. Then he stroked her on the head, patted her on the shoulder and
said:
"Very good, very good, my child. When the holy Easter comes, we
will talk it over. . . . I will help you. . . . I will help you. . .
."
His mother came in quietly, timidly, and prayed before the ikon.
Noticing that he was not sleeping, she said:
"Won't you have a drop of soup?"
"No, thank you," he answered, "I am not hungry."
"You seem to be unwell, now I look at you. I should think so; you
may well be ill! The whole day on your legs, the whole day. . . . And, my
goodness, it makes one's heart ache even to look at you! Well, Easter is
not far off; you will rest then, please God. Then we will have a talk,
too, but now I'm not going to disturb you with my chatter. Come along,
Katya; let his holiness sleep a little."
And he remembered how once very long ago, when he was a boy, she had
spoken exactly like that, in the same jestingly respectful tone, with a
Church dignitary. . . . Only from her extraordinarily kind eyes and the
timid, anxious glance she stole at him as she went out of the room could
one have guessed that this was his mother. He shut his eyes and seemed to
sleep, but twice heard the clock strike and Father Sisoy coughing the
other side of the wall. And once more his mother came in and looked
timidly at him for a minute. Someone drove up to the steps, as he could
hear, in a coach or in a chaise. Suddenly a knock, the door slammed, the
lay brother came into the bedroom.
"Your holiness," he called.
"Well?"
"The horses are here; it's time for the evening service."
"What o'clock is it?"
"A quarter past seven."
He dressed and drove to the cathedral. During all the "Twelve
Gospels" he had to stand in the middle of the church without moving,
and the first gospel, the longest and the most beautiful, he read himself.
A mood of confidence and courage came over him. That first gospel, "Now
is the Son of Man glorified," he knew by heart; and as he read
he raised his eyes from time to time, and saw on both sides a perfect sea
of lights and heard the splutter of candles, but, as in past years, he
could not see the people, and it seemed as though these were all the same
people as had been round him in those days, in his childhood and his
youth; that they would always be the same every year and till such time as
God only knew.
His father had been a deacon, his grandfather a priest, his
great-grandfather a deacon, and his whole family, perhaps from the days
when Christianity had been accepted in Russia,
had belonged to the priesthood; and his love for the Church services, for
the priesthood, for the peal of the bells, was deep in him, ineradicable,
innate. In church, particularly when he took part in the service, he felt
vigorous, of good cheer, happy. So it was now. Only when the eighth gospel
had been read, he felt that his voice had grown weak, even his cough was
inaudible. His head had begun to ache intensely, and he was troubled by a
fear that he might fall down. And his legs were indeed quite numb, so that
by degrees he ceased to feel them and could not understand how or on what
he was standing, and why he did not fall. . . .
It was a quarter to twelve when the service was over. When he reached
home, the bishop undressed and went to bed at once without even saying his
prayers. He could not speak and felt that he could not have stood up. When
he had covered his head with the quilt he felt a sudden longing to be
abroad, an insufferable longing! He felt that he would give his life not
to see those pitiful cheap shutters, those low ceilings, not to smell that
heavy monastery smell. If only there were one person to whom he could have
talked, have opened his heart!
For a long while he heard footsteps in the next room and could not tell
whose they were. At last the door opened, and Sisoy came in with a candle
and a tea-cup in his hand.
"You are in bed already, your holiness?" he asked. "Here
I have come to rub you with spirit and vinegar. A thorough rubbing does a
great deal of good. Lord Jesus Christ! . . . That's the way . . . that's
the way. . . . I've just been in our monastery. . . . I don't like it. I'm
going away from here to-morrow, your holiness; I don't want to stay
longer. Lord Jesus Christ. . . . That's the way. . . ."
Sisoy could never stay long in the same place, and he felt as though he
had been a whole year in the Pankratievsky Monastery. Above all, listening
to him it was difficult to understand where his home was, whether he cared
for anyone or anything, whether he believed in God. . . . He did not know
himself why he was a monk, and, indeed, he did not think about it, and the
time when he had become a monk had long passed out of his memory; it
seemed as though he had been born a monk.
"I'm going away to-morrow; God be with them all."
"I should like to talk to you. . . . I can't find the time,"
said the bishop softly with an effort. "I don't know anything or
anybody here. . . ."
"I'll stay till Sunday if you like; so be it, but I don't want to
stay longer. I am sick of them!"
"I ought not to be a bishop," said the bishop softly. "I
ought to have been a village priest, a deacon . . . or simply a monk. . .
. All this oppresses me . . . oppresses me."
"What? Lord Jesus Christ. . . . That's the way. Come, sleep well,
your holiness! . . . What's the good of talking? It's no use.
Good-night!"
The bishop did not sleep all night. And at eight o'clock in the morning
he began to have hemorrhage from the bowels. The lay brother was alarmed,
and ran first to the archimandrite, then for the monastery doctor, Ivan
Andreyitch, who lived in the town. The doctor, a stout old man with a long
grey beard, made a prolonged examination of the bishop, and kept shaking
his head and frowning, then said:
"Do you know, your holiness, you have got typhoid?"
After an hour or so of hemorrhage the bishop looked much thinner,
paler, and wasted; his face looked wrinkled, his eyes looked bigger, and
he seemed older, shorter, and it seemed to him that he was thinner,
weaker, more insignificant than any one, that everything that had been had
retreated far, far away and would never go on again or be repeated.
"How good," he thought, "how good!"
His old mother came. Seeing his wrinkled face and his big eyes, she was
frightened, she fell on her knees by the bed and began kissing his face,
his shoulders, his hands. And to her, too, it seemed that he was thinner,
weaker, and more insignificant than anyone, and now she forgot that he was
a bishop, and kissed him as though he were a child very near and very dear
to her.
"Pavlusha, darling," she said; "my own, my darling son!
. . . Why are you like this? Pavlusha, answer me!"
Katya, pale and severe, stood beside her, unable to understand what was
the matter with her uncle, why there was such a look of suffering on her
grandmother's face, why she was saying such sad and touching things. By
now he could not utter a word, he could understand nothing, and he
imagined he was a simple ordinary man, that he was walking quickly,
cheerfully through the fields, tapping with his stick, while above him was
the open sky bathed in sunshine, and that he was free now as a bird and
could go where he liked!
"Pavlusha, my darling son, answer me," the old woman was
saying. "What is it? My own!"
"Don't disturb his holiness," Sisoy said angrily, walking
about the room. "Let him sleep . . . what's the use . . . it's no
good. . . ."
Three doctors arrived, consulted together, and went away again. The day
was long, incredibly long, then the night came on and passed slowly,
slowly, and towards morning on Saturday the lay brother went in to the old
mother who was lying on the sofa in the parlour, and asked her to go into
the bedroom: the bishop had just breathed his last.
Next day was Easter Sunday. There were forty-two churches and six
monasteries in the town; the sonorous, joyful clang of the bells hung over
the town from morning till night unceasingly, setting the spring air
aquiver; the birds were singing, the sun was shining brightly. The big
market square was noisy, swings were going, barrel organs were playing,
accordions were squeaking, drunken voices were shouting. After midday
people began driving up and down the principal street.
In short, all was merriment, everything was satisfactory, just as it
had been the year before, and as it will be in all likelihood next year.
A month later a new suffragan bishop was appointed, and no one thought
anything more of Bishop Pyotr, and afterwards he was completely forgotten.
And only the dead man's old mother, who is living to-day with her
son-in-law the deacon in a remote little district town, when she goes out
at night to bring her cow in and meets other women at the pasture, begins
talking of her children and her grandchildren, and says that she had a son
a bishop, and this she says timidly, afraid that she may not be believed.
. . .
And, indeed, there are some who do not believe her.
NOTES
Pankratievsky Monastery: named for St. Pancras, first bishop of Sicily,
martyred A. D. 60
Jehud's ass: possible reference to Jehu, who was notorious for driving
fast and recklessly (II Kings 9:20)
Betula Kinderbalsamica Secuta: fractured Latin and German for
"twigs children-healing flogger"
read the names: in the Orthodox Russian Church parishioners pass notes
with names of those needing prayers
archimandrite: monk who is head of a monastery
war among the Japanese: the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-1895
Montenegrins: South Slavic people allied with Russian against Turks
suffragan bishop: a bishop in charge of only one town (a diocesan
bishop is in charge of more than one town, and thus above a suffragan
bishop)
five, a four, and sometimes even a three: an "A"
"B" or "C"
the Bridegroom who comes at midnight: cf. Matthew 25:6
Now is the Son of Man glorified: John 13:31
Christianity had been accepted in Russia: around 988, when Vladimir,
Grand Prince of Kiev, was converted |
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