| PART 7
Chapter 20
 Stepan Arkadyevitch, as usual, did not waste his time in
 Petersburg.  In Petersburg, besides business, his sister's
 divorce, and his coveted appointment, he wanted, as he always
 did, to freshen himself up, as he said, after the mustiness of
 Moscow. In spite of its cafes chantants and its omnibuses, Moscow was yet
 a stagnant bog.  Stepan Arkadyevitch always felt it.  After
 living for some time in Moscow, especially in close relations
 with his family, he was conscious of a depression of spirits. 
 After being a long time in Moscow without a change, he reached a
 point when he positively began to be worrying himself over his
 wife's ill-humor and reproaches, over his children's health and
 education, and the petty details of his official work; even the
 fact of being in debt worried him.  But he had only to go and
 stay a little while in Petersburg, in the circle there in which
 he moved, where people lived--really lived--instead of vegetating
 as in Moscow, and all such ideas vanished and melted away at
 once, like wax before the fire.  His wife?...  Only that day he
 had been talking to Prince Tchetchensky.  Prince Tchetchensky had
 a wife and family, grown-up pages in the corps,...and he had
 another illegitimate family of children also.  Though the first
 family was very nice too, Prince Tchetchensky felt happier in his
 second family; and he used to take his eldest son with him to
 his second family, and told Stepan Arkadyevitch that he thought
 it good for his son, enlarging his ideas.  What would have been
 said to that in Moscow? His children?  In Petersburg children did not prevent their
 parents from enjoying life.  The children were brought up in
 schools, and there was no trace of the wild idea that prevailed
 in Moscow, in Lvov's household, for instance, that all the
 luxuries of life were for the children, while the parents have
 nothing but work and anxiety.  Here people understood that a man
 is in duty bound to live for himself, as every man of culture
 should live. His official duties?  Official work here was not the stiff,
 hopeless drudgery that it was in Moscow.  Here there was some
 interest in official life.  A chance meeting, a service rendered,
 a happy phrase, a knack of facetious mimicry, and a man's career
 might be made in a trice.  So it had been with Bryantsev, whom
 Stepan Arkadyevitch had met the previous day, and who was one of
 the highest functionaries in government now.  There was some
 interest in official work like that. |